The launch pad programme is being delivered by the Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre (OHC) alongside Genomics England, the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry and the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency. It will benefit the tens of millions of children globally, including hundreds of thousands in the UK, who have rare and life-threatening genetic diseases, with limited access to a treatment.
This announcement offers them hope as the Launch Pad aims to deliver an end-to-end pathway covering diagnosis, design and rapid manufacturing of therapies and treatments.
The programme’s first project will explore the use of antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) to treat children with ultra-rare and life-threatening brain conditions. This approach has been driven by Julia Vitarello, mother of Mila, and founder of Mila’s Miracle Foundation. Mila was the first person to receive an individualised medicine, an ASO called Milasen, for a condition called Batten’s disease. Longer term, the Rare Therapies Launch Pad will support access to other types of individualised therapies across a wider range of rare conditions, which affect 1 in 17 people globally.
Professor Matthew Wood, Director of the Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre, said: 'The Rare Therapies Launch Pad is a very welcome major advance towards delivering therapies to people with rare genetic diseases. It will put the UK at the forefront of therapeutic and regulatory innovation in this area, building on its global leadership in genomics. The Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre has a mission dedicated to the development of medicines for rare diseases and will play a central role in the Rare Therapies Launch Pad in the discovery and delivery to patients of these new, individualised drugs.'