Dyne Gets FDA Orphan, Rare-Pediatric-Disease Designations for DYNE-251
March 23 2023 - 08:19AM
Dow Jones News
By Colin Kellaher
Dyne Therapeutics Inc. on Thursday said the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration granted a pair of key designations to its DYNE-251
investigational therapeutic for certain patients with Duchenne
muscular dystrophy, or DMD.
The Waltham, Mass., clinical-stage muscle-disease company said
the FDA granted orphan-drug and rare-pediatric-disease designations
to DYNE-251, which it is evaluating in a Phase 1/2 study in
patients with DMD with mutations amenable to skipping exon 51.
The FDA's orphan-drug program gives special status to drugs and
biologics for diseases and disorders that affect fewer than 200,000
people in the U.S. and provides for an extended marketing
exclusivity period against competition.
The agency awards priority-review vouchers to companies upon
approval of drugs that are granted the rare-pediatric-disease
designation, and those vouchers can be used to obtain priority
review for another drug or sold to other companies.
DMD, a rare, fatal neuromuscular genetic disease that occurs in
roughly one in every 3,500 to 5,000 males, is caused by a change or
mutation in the gene that encodes instructions for dystrophin, a
protein found in muscle cells. There is no cure for DMD, and
currently approved therapies provide limited benefit.
Dyne said it expects to report initial data from the multiple
ascending dose placebo-controlled portion of the Phase 1/2 study of
DYNE-251 in the second half of the year.
Write to Colin Kellaher at colin.kellaher@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 23, 2023 08:04 ET (12:04 GMT)
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