GlycoMimetics : to Present at Two Upcoming Virtual Healthcare Investor Conferences
November 11, 2020 at 08:40 am EST
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ROCKVILLE - GlycoMimetics, Inc. (Nasdaq: GLYC), today announces that CEO Rachel King plans to present an overview of the company at the upcoming Stifel 2020 Virtual Healthcare Conference on Tuesday, November 17 and the Jefferies Virtual London Healthcare Conference on Thursday, November 19.
Both presentations will be available on the Company's website, under the Investors tab. Details are as follows
Stifel 2020 Virtual Healthcare Conference
November 16-18, 2020
GlycoMimetics presentation: Tuesday, November 17, 8:00 a.m. (EST)
Jefferies Virtual London Healthcare Conference
November 17-19, 2020
GlycoMimetics presentation: Thursday, November 19, 6:45 - 7:15 (BST)
About GlycoMimetics, Inc.
GlycoMimetics is a biotechnology company with two late-stage clinical development programs and a pipeline of novel glycomimetic drugs, all designed to address unmet medical needs resulting from diseases in which carbohydrate biology plays a key role. GlycoMimetics' drug candidate, uproleselan, an E-selectin antagonist, was evaluated in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial as a potential treatment for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and is being evaluated across a range of patient populations including a Company-sponsored Phase 3 trial in relapsed/refractory AML under breakthrough therapy designation. Rivipansel, a pan-selectin antagonist, is being explored for use in treatment of acute VOC in SCD. GlycoMimetics has also completed a Phase 1 clinical trial with another wholly-owned drug candidate, GMI-1359, a combined CXCR4 and E-selectin antagonist. GlycoMimetics is located in Rockville, MD in the BioHealth Capital Region.
GlycoMimetics, Inc. is a late clinical-stage biotechnology company discovering and developing glycobiology-based therapies for cancers, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and for inflammatory diseases. It is developing a pipeline of glycomimetics, which are small molecules that mimic the structure of carbohydrates involved in biological processes, to inhibit disease-related functions of carbohydrates, such as the roles they play in inflammation, cancer and infection. Its drug candidates include Uproleselan, GMI-1687, Galectin Antagonists and GMI-1359. It is developing Uproleselan, a specific E-selectin antagonist, to be used in combination with chemotherapy to treat patients with AML, a life-threatening hematologic cancer, and potentially other hematologic cancers. It has designed an antagonist of E-selectin, GMI-1687, that is suitable for subcutaneous administration. GMI-1359 is a drug candidate that simultaneously targets both E-selectin and a chemokine receptor (CXCR4).