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Rare Disease Drugs: FDA Has Steps Underway to Strengthen Coordination of Activities Supporting Drug Development

GAO-25-106774 Published: Nov 18, 2024. Publicly Released: Nov 18, 2024.
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Fast Facts

Millions of Americans—many of them children—have a rare disease. But only about 5% of the nearly 10,000 identified rare diseases have Food and Drug Administration-approved treatments.

Developing rare disease drugs is challenging. The diseases aren't well understood, and small patient populations can limit clinical trial results. FDA has 18 rare disease programs to address such complexities.

FDA is also implementing a new Rare Disease Innovation Hub to expedite the development and approval of safe and effective rare disease drugs. One goal of the Hub is to improve coordination between two agency centers that review drug applications.

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Highlights

What GAO Found

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is responsible for determining whether drugs are safe and effective. The agency also works with drug sponsors and others to support the development of drugs to treat rare diseases, recognizing the unique challenges involved, such as assessing drug effectiveness in small patient populations. Rare disease drugs must meet the same standards as other drugs to be marketed, but FDA reviewers may apply flexibility in determining the evidence needed to meet the standards. Within FDA, staff in two of the agency's centers—the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) and the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER)—review drug applications.

According to FDA officials, training and engagement with patient groups are among the important strategies to help ensure the agency's staff have the expertise needed to review rare disease drug applications. Agency officials also said that a multi-layer review process helps ensure consistency among reviewers in regulatory decision-making. FDA officials said they are committed to using available flexibilities where appropriate to ensure safe and effective rare disease drugs are approved for marketing.

GAO found that FDA has 18 rare disease-specific programs—most initiated since 2019—intended to help address complexities common to rare disease drug development. Each of these programs aimed to do at least one of the following: advance understanding of the diseases, expand stakeholder engagement, or support drug development efforts.

FDA Rare Disease-Specific Program Aims

FDA Rare Disease-Specific Program Aims

FDA is the process of implementing a new Rare Disease Innovation Hub intended to enhance coordination between CDER and CBER and help expedite development and approval of safe and effective drugs for rare diseases. To do so, FDA will develop a cross-center strategic agenda with public input to help shape priorities and initiatives. According to agency officials, this new initiative will include the development of agencywide goals for the agency's rare disease activities. While it is still early, this initiative holds promise for guiding the agency's rare disease activities in a strategic and coordinated fashion. According to FDA, the new initiative will leverage each center's rare disease-focused activities and enhance existing cross-center collaborations. Before the agency announced its new initiative, the two centers focused on developing center-specific goals for their respective rare disease activities. FDA officials said both centers plan to align their goals with agencywide goals once they are defined.

Why GAO Did This Study

Nearly one in 10 Americans have a rare disease, which is typically defined as any condition affecting fewer than 200,000 people in the United States. There are up to 10,000 rare diseases, however, only 5 percent of rare diseases have FDA-approved treatments.

The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 includes a provision for GAO to examine FDA activities related to rare disease drug development and approval. This report, among other objectives, describes FDA's strategies to help ensure reviewers have the necessary expertise and use appropriate flexibilities in their reviews, describes FDA's programs to support rare disease drug development, and examines FDA's efforts to coordinate its rare disease efforts.

GAO reviewed relevant statutes, regulations, and FDA documentation. GAO also interviewed FDA officials, drug sponsors of approved rare disease drugs, and patient advocacy groups representing individuals with rare diseases.

For more information, contact John E. Dicken at (202) 512-7114 or dickenj@gao.gov.

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