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Author: Dr. Raymond A. Huml
Rare diseases affect millions worldwide, yet treatment options remain scarce. For families like ours who live with Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) – the journey toward effective therapies is deeply personal. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) offers a critical program known as the Orphan Drug Development Program, designed to incentivize drug development for rare conditions. But why should we, as advocates, patients, and caregivers, understand it?
The Challenge of Rare Disease Drug Development
Traditional drug development is an arduous process, often requiring billions of dollars and years of research. For common diseases, the potential financial return motivates pharmaceutical companies to invest in treatment innovations. Rare diseases, however, affect fewer than 200,000 individuals in the U.S., making drug development financially risky. Without incentives, many promising therapies would never reach the market.
How the Orphan Drug Development Program Helps
The Orphan Drug Act of 1983 created a pathway for researchers and pharmaceutical companies to bring treatments for rare diseases to market. Here is how it helps:
Since its inception, more than 600 orphan drugs have been approved, a dramatic increase compared to the handful available before the program existed.
Why This Matters to Us—And to You
For families affected by rare diseases, understanding this program is essential. It helps us advocate for continued funding, research, and legislative support. As Vice President of Rare Disease Strategy at Sciensus, I work to ensure that patient voices remain central to conversations about rare drug development and commercialization. Volunteer Chapter Directors for the FSHD Society are deeply involved in empowering patients and caregivers through education and community support.
Empowered patients and caregivers can:
Every advancement in orphan drug development offers hope – not only to families like ours but to the entire rare disease community.
Resources for Patients Living with FSHD
Moving Forward Together
We must continue to spread awareness about the importance of orphan drug policies. Every patient, caregiver, researcher, and advocate has a role to play in pushing forward these initiatives.
By staying informed and engaged, we help shape the future of rare disease treatments, ensuring that no community – or patient with FSHD – is left behind.
We recommend the use of the below hashtags when posting about FSHD Research, drug development, and the World Orphan Drug Congress/Act. You can also use these hashtags to search for information on social media.
#RareDisease #OrphanDrugs #FSHD #FDA #DrugDevelopment #Advocacy #HealthcareInnovation #Biotech #MedicalResearch #PatientVoices #Sciensus #RareDiseaseCommunity #HealthPolicy #FSHDSociety