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MAIA Biotechnology Advances Ateganosine Cancer Treatment Program, Outlines Targeted 2026 Clinical Milestones and Growth Momentum

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MAIA Biotechnology (NYSE: MAIA) provided a corporate update on Jan 20, 2026 outlining 2025 achievements and targeted 2026 clinical milestones for ateganosine, a telomere-targeting immunotherapy. Key 2025 items include FDA Fast Track designation, initiation of a pivotal THIO-104 Phase 3 in 3L NSCLC, Part C expansion of the THIO-101 Phase 2 into Asia and Europe, a $2.3M NIH grant, strategic combination agreements with Roche and BeOne, and ~$17.6M capital raised in 2025. MAIA cites strong 2025 efficacy data and a projected 18–24 month path toward potential early commercial approval, with planned interim Phase 3 efficacy readouts and continued FDA engagement in 2026.

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Positive

  • FDA Fast Track designation for ateganosine in NSCLC
  • Initiated pivotal THIO-104 Phase 3 in 3L NSCLC
  • $2.3M NIH grant to support Phase 2 U.S. enrollment
  • Raised approximately $17.6M in 2025 capital raises
  • Established combination agreements with Roche and BeOne

Negative

  • Early commercial approval contingent on strong interim Phase 3 efficacy data
  • Clinical and regulatory progress depends on ongoing trial readouts expected in 2026

News Market Reaction – MAIA

+26.44% 6.2x vol
52 alerts
+26.44% News Effect
+26.0% Peak in 7 hr 37 min
+$18M Valuation Impact
$84M Market Cap
6.2x Rel. Volume

On the day this news was published, MAIA gained 26.44%, reflecting a significant positive market reaction. Argus tracked a peak move of +26.0% during that session. Our momentum scanner triggered 52 alerts that day, indicating high trading interest and price volatility. This price movement added approximately $18M to the company's valuation, bringing the market cap to $84M at that time. Trading volume was exceptionally heavy at 6.2x the daily average, suggesting very strong buying interest.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

Key Figures

Global immunotherapy market: $50+ billion NIH grant: $2.3 million Capital raised 2025: $17.6 million +2 more
5 metrics
Global immunotherapy market $50+ billion Estimated global immunotherapy market size mentioned for ateganosine opportunity
NIH grant $2.3 million Grant to support expansion of Phase 2 trial for U.S. patients
Capital raised 2025 $17.6 million Capital raises throughout 2025 to fund ateganosine development
Insider ownership More than 5 million shares (~13%) Directors and officers’ holdings as of Dec 31, 2025
Potential approval window 18 to 24 months Management’s stated timeframe for potential early commercial approval

Market Reality Check

Price: $1.57 Vol: Volume 2,393,400 vs 20-da...
high vol
$1.57 Last Close
Volume Volume 2,393,400 vs 20-day average 629,900 (relative volume 3.8x). high
Technical Price $1.74 trading above 200-day MA at $1.58.

Peers on Argus

MAIA gained 9.43% while peers were mixed: CUE up 7.74%, BTAI down 3.16%, others ...

MAIA gained 9.43% while peers were mixed: CUE up 7.74%, BTAI down 3.16%, others modestly changed. No peers appeared in the momentum scanner, pointing to a stock-specific move.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Dec 24 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Dec 24 Insider participation Positive +8.8% Directors joined private placement, increasing insider ownership and signaling confidence.
Dec 16 Private placement Negative -8.9% Announced $1.51M equity financing with new shares and warrants issued.
Dec 11 Clinical trial progress Positive +18.8% Pivotal Phase 3 initiation and strong Phase 2 NSCLC data highlighted for ateganosine.
Dec 11 Phase 3 enrollment Positive +18.8% First patient dosed in THIO-104 Phase 3 trial for third-line NSCLC.
Dec 11 Insider buying Positive +18.8% Reported additional insider open-market purchases and advancing NSCLC program.
Pattern Detected

Recent MAIA news, especially clinical progress and insider participation in financings, has frequently coincided with positive price reactions.

Recent Company History

Over the last months, MAIA highlighted pivotal progress for ateganosine, including initiation of a Phase 3 NSCLC trial and Fast Track designation, which previously saw moves of up to 18.84%. The company also executed private placements, with board members participating and holding over 13% of shares. Today’s corporate update on 2025 achievements and 2026 milestones fits this pattern of clinical advancement and insider-aligned financing.

Market Pulse Summary

The stock surged +26.4% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with M...
Analysis

The stock surged +26.4% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with MAIA’s pattern of sizable moves on clinical and corporate milestones, as seen with prior Phase 3 updates that moved the stock up to 18.84%. The latest update reinforces Fast Track status, pivotal trial progress, and 2026 catalysts, while trading remains below the $2.74 52-week high. Investors have also seen repeated equity financings, which could weigh on sustainability if further capital raises occur.

Key Terms

Phase 3, Phase 2, Fast Track, Accelerated Approval, +4 more
8 terms
Phase 3 medical
"High probability of technical success in pivotal Phase 3 trial based on unmatched"
Phase 3 is the late-stage clinical testing step for a new drug or medical treatment, where the product is given to large groups of patients to confirm effectiveness, monitor side effects, and compare it to standard care. Successful Phase 3 results are often the final scientific hurdle before regulators decide on approval and market launch—like passing a final exam before graduation—and can sharply change a company's valuation and future revenue prospects.
Phase 2 medical
"advances concurrent Phase 2 expansion and Phase 3 trials along strategic"
Phase 2 is the mid-stage clinical trial where a new drug or treatment is tested in a larger group of patients to see if it works and to keep checking safety after initial human testing. Think of it as a field test that proves whether a product actually delivers its promised benefit. Investors watch Phase 2 closely because its results strongly influence a medicine’s chances of reaching the market, the size of its potential sales, and the company’s valuation.
Fast Track regulatory
"FDA’s Fast Track designation for ateganosine in NSCLC advances concurrent"
A fast track designation is a regulatory label that speeds up the review and communication between a drug developer and regulators for treatments addressing serious illnesses or unmet medical needs. For investors, it matters because it can shorten development time and reduce regulatory delays—like getting a VIP lane at the airport—raising the chance of earlier market access and potential revenue, though it does not guarantee approval.
Accelerated Approval regulatory
"positioning ateganosine for potential eligibility under the Accelerated Approval and"
Accelerated approval is a process that allows new medical treatments to be approved more quickly than usual if they address serious or life-threatening conditions and show promising early results. For investors, it signals that a treatment may reach the market sooner, potentially boosting a company's prospects, but it also involves some uncertainty since full evidence of effectiveness is still being gathered.
Priority Review regulatory
"eligibility under the Accelerated Approval and Priority Review regulatory pathways."
Priority review is a regulatory fast-track that shortens the time an agency spends evaluating a drug, vaccine or medical device application so a decision comes sooner than normal. For investors, it matters because a faster review is like an express lane to market: it can speed revenue potential and reduce regulatory uncertainty, but it does not guarantee approval and still requires the product to meet safety and effectiveness standards.
overall response rates (ORR) medical
"Interim disease control rates (DCR), overall response rates (ORR) and progression"
Overall response rate (ORR) is the percentage of patients in a clinical trial whose tumors measurably shrink or disappear after receiving a treatment. Investors use ORR as a quick snapshot of a drug’s effectiveness in shrinking disease—similar to measuring how many customers report a problem fixed—because higher ORR can speed regulatory approval, boost confidence in commercial prospects, and affect a drug’s market value and investment outlook.
progression free survival (PFS) medical
"overall response rates (ORR) and progression free survival (PFS) analysis of"
Progression free survival (PFS) is the amount of time after a treatment starts during which a patient’s disease does not get worse. Investors watch PFS because it’s a commonly reported measure in clinical trials that can indicate a drug’s effectiveness earlier than overall survival, much like measuring how long a dam holds before leaks reappear; stronger PFS results can speed regulatory decisions and affect a drug’s commercial prospects.
non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) medical
"third-line non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treatment FDA’s Fast Track"
A common group of lung cancers that arise from the lungs’ cell lining and grow in ways different from the faster-spreading “small cell” form; think of it as several related varieties of the same illness rather than one single disease. It matters to investors because diagnosis rates, new drugs, diagnostic tests, and clinical trial results for these cancers can drive large, sustained revenue opportunities and regulatory decisions that materially affect healthcare and biotech company valuations.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

High probability of technical success in pivotal Phase 3 trial based on unmatched efficacy data for third-line non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treatment

FDA’s Fast Track designation for ateganosine in NSCLC advances concurrent Phase 2 expansion and Phase 3 trials along strategic regulatory pathways

Strong momentum toward goal of early commercial approval

Potential breakthrough therapeutic for estimated $50+ billion global immunotherapy market;
first and only telomere-targeting anticancer agent in clinical development anywhere

CHICAGO, Jan. 20, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- MAIA Biotechnology, Inc. (NYSE American: MAIA) (“MAIA”, the “Company”), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing targeted immunotherapies for cancer, today provided a corporate update on 2025 achievements and highlighted key targeted milestones and growth catalysts for 2026.

“MAIA’s strong clinical execution in 2025 delivered exceptional efficacy data for ateganosine sequenced with a checkpoint inhibitor, including disease control, response rates, and survival data well above standard of care benchmarks,” said MAIA founder and CEO Vlad Vitoc, M.D. “The results clearly differentiate our novel telomere-targeting science and support the U.S. FDA’s Fast Track designation granted in 2025, positioning ateganosine for potential eligibility under the Accelerated Approval and Priority Review regulatory pathways.

“Our statistical assessments of ateganosine imply a high probability of technical success in our concurrent Phase 3 and Phase 2 trials. As our first-in-class small molecule advances toward potential early commercial approval—possibly within 18 to 24 months—we believe our strong execution is driving a clear value-creation inflection point, with meaningful long-term benefits for stockholders.”

2025 Achievements

  • Secured FDA Fast Track designation for ateganosine as a treatment for NSCLC. Fast Track expedites the review of investigational drugs that treat serious conditions and fill an unmet medical need.

  • Marked a major clinical milestone by initiating a full approval THIO-104 Phase 3 trial in third-line (3L) NSCLC patients resistant to immunotherapy and chemotherapy.

  • Advanced the THIO-101 Phase 2 clinical trial to the Part C expansion phase, substantially increasing the patient pool to include countries in Asia and Europe. The expansion trial positions the ateganosine program for broader regulatory and commercial relevance.

  • Awarded $2.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for the expansion of Phase 2 trial. The grant is intended to support expenses related to the enrollment of U.S. patients who are resistant to chemo and immunotherapy.

  • Validated telomere-targeting as a differentiated therapeutic approach with applicability to multiple high mortality cancers. To our knowledge, ateganosine remains the only direct telomere-targeting anticancer agent in clinical development anywhere.

  • Established checkpoint inhibitor combination partnerships through a master agreement with Roche for atezolizumab and a clinical supply agreement with BeOne Medicines for tislelizumab, enabling multiple future combination trials.

  • Raised approximately $17.6 million from capital raises throughout 2025, with participation by members of the Board in nearly all transactions. This signals strong conviction and confidence in the long-term value creation potential of the ateganosine platform. As of December 31,2025, MAIA’s directors and officers hold more than 5 million shares or approximately 13% of the Company.

Targeted 2026 Milestones

  • Initial measures of efficacy from Phase 3 study. Interim disease control rates (DCR), overall response rates (ORR) and progression free survival (PFS) analysis of ateganosine compared to the control arm will support regulatory discussions. Strong interim data could lead to early full commercial approval.

  • Conclusion of Part C of Phase 2 study. Expansion of the trial provides additional clinical efficacy data to support regulatory review for commercial approval.

  • Engage in regulatory interactions with the FDA. Expand ongoing FDA dialogue under the Fast Track designation, including discussions around trial enhancements and prospects for Accelerated Approval and Priority Review.

  • Clinical development of second-generation molecules to start in Phase 1 trials. Additional small molecules fully developed in-house with better expected efficacy compared to ateganosine.

About Ateganosine

Ateganosine (THIO, 6-thio-dG or 6-thio-2’-deoxyguanosine) is a first-in-class investigational telomere-targeting agent currently in clinical development to evaluate its activity in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Telomeres, along with the enzyme telomerase, play a fundamental role in the survival of cancer cells and their resistance to current therapies. The modified nucleotide 6-thio-2’-deoxyguanosine induces telomerase-dependent telomeric DNA modification, DNA damage responses, and selective cancer cell death. Ateganosine-damaged telomeric fragments accumulate in cytosolic micronuclei and activates both innate (cGAS/STING) and adaptive (T-cell) immune responses. The sequential treatment of ateganosine followed by PD-(L)1 inhibitors resulted in profound and persistent tumor regression in advanced, in vivo cancer models by induction of cancer type–specific immune memory. Ateganosine is presently developed as a second or later line of treatment for NSCLC for patients that have progressed beyond the standard-of-care regimen of existing checkpoint inhibitors.

About MAIA Biotechnology, Inc.

MAIA is a targeted therapy, immuno-oncology company focused on the development and commercialization of potential first-in-class drugs with novel mechanisms of action that are intended to meaningfully improve and extend the lives of people with cancer. Our lead program is ateganosine (THIO), a potential first-in-class cancer telomere targeting agent in clinical development for the treatment of NSCLC patients with telomerase-positive cancer cells. For more information, please visit www.maiabiotech.com.

Forward Looking Statements

MAIA cautions that all statements, other than statements of historical facts contained in this press release, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause our or our industry’s actual results, levels or activity, performance or achievements to be materially different from those anticipated by such statements. The use of words such as “may,” “might,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “expect,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “project,” “intend,” “future,” “potential,” or “continue,” and other similar expressions are intended to identify forward looking statements. However, the absence of these words does not mean that statements are not forward-looking. For example, all statements we make regarding (i) the initiation, timing, cost, progress and results of our preclinical and clinical studies and our research and development programs, (ii) our ability to advance product candidates into, and successfully complete, clinical studies, (iii) the timing or likelihood of regulatory filings and approvals, (iv) our ability to develop, manufacture and commercialize our product candidates and to improve the manufacturing process, (v) the rate and degree of market acceptance of our product candidates, (vi) the size and growth potential of the markets for our product candidates and our ability to serve those markets, and (vii) our expectations regarding our ability to obtain and maintain intellectual property protection for our product candidates, are forward looking. All forward-looking statements are based on current estimates, assumptions and expectations by our management that, although we believe to be reasonable, are inherently uncertain. Any forward-looking statement expressing an expectation or belief as to future events is expressed in good faith and believed to be reasonable at the time such forward-looking statement is made. However, these statements are not guarantees of future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties and other factors beyond our control that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in any forward-looking statement. Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it was made. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. In this release, unless the context requires otherwise, “MAIA,” “Company,” “we,” “our,” and “us” refers to MAIA Biotechnology, Inc. and its subsidiaries.

Investor Relations Contact
+1 (872) 270-3518
ir@maiabiotech.com


FAQ

What did MAIA (MAIA) announce about ateganosine on January 20, 2026?

MAIA announced FDA Fast Track designation, initiation of THIO-104 Phase 3 in 3L NSCLC, Phase 2 Part C expansion, a $2.3M NIH grant, and 2026 milestones including interim Phase 3 readouts.

How soon could MAIA seek commercial approval for ateganosine (MAIA)?

The company said potential early commercial approval could be possible within 18–24 months pending strong interim Phase 3 data and FDA interactions.

What funding and partnerships did MAIA report in the Jan 20, 2026 update?

MAIA reported raising ~$17.6M in 2025, a $2.3M NIH grant, and combination agreements with Roche and BeOne for checkpoint inhibitor trials.

What Phase 3 milestones will MAIA (MAIA) report in 2026 for ateganosine?

MAIA plans interim analyses of DCR, ORR, and PFS from the Phase 3 trial to support regulatory discussions and possible early approval.

Will MAIA expand clinical development beyond ateganosine in 2026?

Yes; MAIA plans to start Phase 1 development of second-generation telomere-targeting small molecules in 2026.
MAIA Biotechnology Inc.

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