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| Funder | Food and Drug Administration |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Not specified |
| Country | USA |
| Start Date | Aug 04, 2025 |
| End Date | Aug 03, 2030 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Data Source | Grants.gov |
| Grant ID | 43e1a3cc-7e23-4d34-b239-ef90fe120504 |
<p>The purpose of this program is to support new approaches that can be applied to facilitate therapeutic development in ultra-rare pediatric and adult cancers, including molecularly-defined subsets of more common cancers. </p><p><br></p><p>Specific areas of interest include, but are not limited to, the following examples:</p><p>• Development of infrastructure for a coordination network and data repository for patient-level data across institutions and internationally to support drug development and regulatory decision-making for one or more ultra-rare cancers.</p><p>• Investigations to explore opportunities to develop and validate early clinical endpoints and other novel efficacy endpoints for evaluation of treatments for ultra-rare cancers.</p><p>• Development and implementation of a collaborative multi-stakeholder effort to support generation and use of real-world data leveraging a registry framework for use in development of new therapies for pediatric patients with diffuse midline glioma (DMG) (including diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, DIPG). </p><p>• Innovative approaches to identify new biologically-driven opportunities for clinical development of previously approved drugs or biologics (hereafter referred to as drugs), including drugs for which development has been discontinued, in ultra-rare cancers.</p><p>• Research to develop novel approaches to preserve the availability of drugs for which commercial developers have discontinued adult development that have strong potential in ultra-rare cancers but lack financial incentives for commercial development</p><p>• Development of methods to incorporate use of telemedicine and/or pragmatic trial design elements (e.g., collecting laboratory and/or imaging data from local facilities) for patient assessments to facilitate enrollment of patients with ultra-rare cancers</p><p>• Development of nanoparticle-based delivery approaches for therapeutic nucleic acids targeting onco-fusion transcription factors in metastatic tumor animal models using targeted bioPROTAC degradation or genomic editing strategies.
Successful efforts should demonstrate effective delivery and expression in-vivo to tumor cells, and downregulation of the target transcription factor protein while minimizing off-target effects and limiting sequestration of the nanoparticle by the liver, spleen, and lungs.</p><p>• Research to exhaustively characterize the plasma-membrane protein expression (surfaceome) of an ultra-rare cancer and the presumed healthy tissue of origin, as well as the resident-tissue stem cells, by single-cell transcriptomics and proteomics.
These studies, and available correlative database analyses, should be designed to identify possible combinatorial signatures of plasma membrane proteins unique to the ultra-rare tumor. Tumors of interest include Sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma and atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors (ATRT).</p><p><br></p>
To be determined
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