From page 6.
Copied, pasted and bolded the interesting part. In my opinion.
Development Programs
Our lead immuno-oncology candidate, MIE-101, resulted from years of research by our scientific co-founders that was supported by numerous grants from federal and private funding agencies. Published preclinical data from our co-founders’ studies and ongoing research support the potential anti-cancer activity of MIE-101 as a monotherapy. In addition, preclinical data generated further support the potential of MIE-101 to improve anti-tumor effects of standard cancer treatments including chemotherapy, radiation therapy and checkpoint inhibitors. These studies include data from multiple preclinical tumor models, veterinary studies in companion animals with naturally occurring cancer, as well as showing the potential to activate human immune effector cells in vitro. MIE-101 is currently in late-stage preclinical development and our goal is to advance MIE-101 into veterinary studies in 2022 and into Phase I clinical trials in 2023, provided we are able to raise sufficient funding.