KC startup’s bone cancer treatment for dogs earns ‘milestone’ USDA validation
January 25, 2024 | Startland News Staff
A decade of hard work by a veteran entrepreneur and her Olathe-based team has cleared a significant hurdle on the pathway to licensure as its first-in-class adoptive cell therapy for dog cancer gains a critical nod of approval from federal regulators.
ELIAS Animal Health, a leading companion animal cancer therapeutics company, recently announced that the U.S. Department of Agriculture Center for Veterinary Biologics determined its clinical trial data demonstrated a reasonable expectation of efficacy for the treatment of bone cancer in dogs.
“We are thrilled to achieve this important milestone with our first cancer product,” said Tammie Wahaus, CEO of ELIAS Animal Health. “I want to thank the pet owners who enrolled their dogs in the ECI-OSA-04 study, the veterinarians for their perseverance to complete the study during a pandemic, and my team for their tireless dedication. We are excited to bring this advanced personalized medicine to the veterinary market and provide a new tool in the fight against cancer.”
Founded in 2014, ELIAS Animal Health is a medical biotechnology company advancing novel targeted T cell-based immunotherapies for the treatment of canine cancers. Cancer is the leading cause of death in dogs over the age of two and represents a significant unmet medical need in veterinary medicine.
Validation by the USDA is an important step in advancing the solution, said Wahaus, a Pipeline Entrepreneur from the 2019 fellowship.
The company plans to raise a $10 million Series A round to support manufacturing expansion, commercial launch of its ELIAS Cancer Immunotherapy (ECI) product, and continued development of its product pipeline: including a novel oncolytic immunotherapy, a pilot study combining ECI with a conditionally approved checkpoint inhibitor, and a pilot study evaluating its adoptive cell therapy in large breed dogs using a sophisticated surgical technique to avoid amputation.
ELIAS Animal Health’s two-arm field safety and efficacy study was one of the largest clinical trials conducted in canine cancer and the first of its kind to evaluate a state-of-the-art adoptive cell therapy as a treatment for cancer in dogs, the company said. ECI works by conditioning the immune system to recognize a patient’s unique cancer, and then delivering an army of activated killer T cells to specifically target and attack those cancer cells.
Prior to commercial launch, which is expected later in 2024, ECI will continue to be available as an experimental biologic for veterinary use under ELIAS’s existing 9 CFR 103.3 authorization as the company finalizes the remaining regulatory actions to secure a first-in-class Autologous Prescription Product license.
Click here to read more about the journey of ELIAS Animal Health, one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020.

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KingFit prescription for growth: DiabetesCare startup becomes a pandemic must-have
WICHITA — A new partnership with a medical giant is adding even more fuel to a momentous 2020 for Kansas-grown KingFit, said Miguel Johns. The startup has entered an agreement with BioTel Care, the diabetes division of BioTelemetry — a $2 billion publicly-traded company, that aims to improve health outcomes through innovation. “This partnership opens doors…
Wiener Kitchen’s chef-driven, artisan eats: This time you’ll actually want to see how the sausage is made
The grill hasn’t gone cold for Overland Park-stuffed Wiener Kitchen, said Dave Derr, recalling his unexpectedly packed experience as a restauranteur amid a pandemic season squeezing many small businesses. “We’ve had more revenue at our store than pre-COVID, which is absolutely nuts,” he chuckled in near disbelief. Consumer habits rapidly changed during the onset of…
Masked by fashion: COVID pivot pushes brand to local production, beyond mere ‘talk’ on social media
Editor’s note: The following is the second in a series of stories about Kansas City fashion companies putting their own creative spin on the often-utilitarian face mask. Blessings are all around, Anita Koul said, sifting through memories of a year that’s been so far defined by wild hardships and tragic losses. “We have to take…
Rising startup stars among latest wave of Digital Sandbox’s critical COVID-era capital
Four new Digital Sandbox KC companies reflect a wide breadth of technology, diversity and ingenuity that’s not only typical of the proof-of-concept program, but needed as the startup community attempts a rebound amid the ongoing pandemic, said Jill Meyer. “Our current environment has been a challenging one to navigate for many of our entrepreneurs,” said…

