Rare disease news

FDA approvals, research breakthroughs, clinical trials, and advocacy updates

Curated and summarized by AI for patients and caregivers

🔍
AllDrug approvalsClinical trialsResearchGrants & fundingAdvocacy & policyPipeline
Show:All newsBreaking onlyImportant & breaking
Date:7 days30 days90 daysAll time

10 articles from the last 90 days matching "Rare Diseases"

ResearchCLINICALTRIALSMar 30

Trial Now Recruiting: Caregiving Networks Across Disease Context and the Life Course (NCT05007990)

This study is looking for 2,800 people to help researchers understand how being a caregiver affects a person's health and stress levels over time. The study includes caregivers of people with rare diseases like Batten disease, Tay-Sachs disease, and other inherited metabolic disorders, as well as caregivers of people with undiagnosed diseases. By learning more about caregiver stress, researchers hope to find ways to better support the millions of unpaid family caregivers in the U.S.

WHY IT MATTERSIf you or a family member care for someone with a rare inherited metabolic disorder, Batten disease, Tay-Sachs, or an undiagnosed disease, this study directly addresses the health challenges caregivers face and could lead to better support resources.
You can act on thisBatten diseaseTay-Sachs diseaseInherited metabolic disordersRead →
ResearchCLINICALTRIALSMar 27

Trial Now Recruiting: Characterization and Contribution of Genome-wide DNA Methylation (DNA Methylation Episignatures) in Rare Diseases With Prenatal Onset (NCT06475651)

Researchers are looking for 63 participants to help them understand how DNA changes in babies before birth compare to DNA changes after birth. They want to collect DNA from amniotic fluid (the fluid around a baby in the womb) or from tissue samples after delivery to create a reference guide. This guide will help doctors better diagnose rare genetic diseases that start before birth.

WHY IT MATTERSThis trial could improve how doctors diagnose rare genetic diseases in fetuses and newborns by establishing what normal DNA patterns look like before birth, which is currently unknown.
You can act on thisRare Fetal Genetic DiseasesCongenital MalformationRead →
Clinical trialCLINICALTRIALSMar 27

Trial Now Recruiting: A Pilot Study to Assess the Feasibility and Acceptability of Newborn Screening Using in Silico Panel-based Solo Genome Sequencing in France (NCT06875089)

Researchers in France are recruiting 5,000 newborns to test a new way of screening for rare diseases using genome sequencing—a complete reading of a baby's DNA. Instead of the current blood spot tests that check for only a few dozen conditions, this study will see if reading a baby's entire genome can safely and effectively find many more rare genetic diseases at birth. This is one of the first major studies in Europe to test this approach.

WHY IT MATTERSThis trial could expand newborn screening in France to detect dozens of additional rare genetic diseases at birth, potentially allowing earlier treatment and better health outcomes for babies with conditions that currently go undiagnosed until symptoms appear.
You can act on thisRare genetic diseases detectable at birthConditions currently missed by standard newborn screeningRead →
PolicyPUBMEDMar 26

Genomic pathway managers: a novel role in the genomic medicine care pathway in France-overview and perspectives.

France is creating a new type of healthcare worker called a Genomic Pathway Manager to help doctors order genetic tests for patients with rare diseases and cancer. These managers will make it easier for patients to get genetic testing by organizing the process and helping doctors understand when and how to use these tests. The goal is to make genetic testing available to more people across France starting in 2025.

WHY IT MATTERSIf you have a rare disease in France, this new system could help your doctor identify your condition faster through genetic testing, potentially leading to earlier diagnosis and treatment options.
Good to knowrare diseases (general)cancer genetic predispositionRead →
ResearchPUBMEDMar 26

A novel patient-Centered approach to clinical trial readiness in rare diseases: Application in Aicardi-Goutières Syndrome (AGS).

Researchers are developing a new way to make sure patients with Aicardi-Goutieres Syndrome (AGS) have a real voice in designing clinical trials for new treatments. AGS is a rare genetic disease that affects the brain and causes inflammation. This study creates a method to listen to what matters most to patients and families so that future drug trials measure the things that actually improve their lives.

WHY IT MATTERSAs new treatments for AGS move toward clinical trials, this research ensures that the outcomes being measured in those trials reflect what patients and families actually care about—not just what doctors think is important.
💬 Ask your doctorAicardi-Goutieres SyndromeAGSRead →
ResearchPUBMEDMar 26

An agentic system for rare disease diagnosis with traceable reasoning.

Researchers created DeepRare, a computer system that helps doctors diagnose rare diseases faster and more accurately. The system uses artificial intelligence to analyze patient information like symptoms, genetic test results, and medical history to suggest possible diagnoses. This could help patients avoid the long 'diagnostic odyssey' where they see many doctors over years before getting a correct diagnosis.

WHY IT MATTERSPatients with rare diseases spend an average of 5+ years seeking diagnosis with repeated misdiagnoses; DeepRare could dramatically shorten this timeline by providing doctors with AI-powered diagnostic support that integrates genetic and phenotype data.
Good to knowrare diseases (general)Read →
Clinical trialCLINICALTRIALSMar 26

Trial Now Recruiting: Clinical and Genetic Evaluation of Individuals With Undiagnosed Disorders Through the Undiagnosed Diseases Network (NCT02450851)

Researchers are looking for 20,000 people with rare diseases that doctors haven't been able to diagnose yet. Many patients spend years going to different doctors and getting repeated tests without finding answers. This study, run by the National Human Genome Research Institute, aims to help solve medical mysteries by using genetic testing and careful evaluation to figure out what's causing people's symptoms.

WHY IT MATTERSIf you or a family member has spent years seeking a diagnosis without answers, this large national study offers free genetic evaluation and expert medical review specifically designed to identify undiagnosed rare diseases.
You can act on thisundiagnosed genetic disordersrare genetic diseasesRead →
ResearchCLINICALTRIALSMar 26

Trial Now Recruiting: Gene Discovery Core, The Manton Center (NCT02743845)

Boston Children's Hospital is looking for 10,000 families with rare genetic diseases that haven't been diagnosed or fully understood yet. Researchers will study the genes and proteins in these families to figure out what's causing their conditions. The goal is to help doctors diagnose and treat rare diseases better in the future.

WHY IT MATTERSIf your family has been searching for answers about a rare or undiagnosed genetic condition, this study could help identify what's causing it and contribute to better treatments for others with the same disease.
You can act on thisUndiagnosed genetic conditionsRare genetic disordersOrphan diseasesRead →
Clinical trialCLINICALTRIALSMar 26

Trial Now Recruiting: Developing a Pipeline to Employ RNA-Seq as a Complementary Diagnostic Tool in Rare Diseases (NCT05996731)

Researchers are testing a new genetic tool called RNA-Seq to help diagnose rare diseases in children and adults whose current genetic tests came back negative. This tool looks at how genes are turned on and off in cells, which can reveal problems that standard DNA testing misses. The study will first test the tool in healthy people and those with known genetic conditions, then use it to try to diagnose patients with undiagnosed rare diseases.

WHY IT MATTERSIf you have a child or family member with symptoms of a rare kidney or genetic disease but genetic testing hasn't found answers, this trial could offer a new diagnostic pathway that standard tests have missed.
You can act on thisAtypical Hemolytic Uremic SyndromeMembranoproliferative GlomerulonephritisAutosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney DiseaseRead →
ResearchCLINICALTRIALSMar 26

Trial Now Recruiting: Stakeholders of Rare Diseases Informing Values In Neuroethics (NCT07314736)

Researchers at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital are recruiting 385 people—including patients, families, doctors, and scientists—to share their thoughts about ethical questions that come up when testing new treatments for rare brain and nerve diseases. The study wants to understand what different groups of people think is fair and right when designing these small, personalized treatment trials.

WHY IT MATTERSThis study directly shapes how future rare neurological disease trials will be designed and conducted, meaning your input as a patient or caregiver could influence the ethical standards that protect you in future treatment studies.
You can act on thisrare neurological diseasesrare neurologic disordersRead →

Get personalized rare disease news

Follow your conditions to see news about the diseases that matter to you — FDA approvals, trial openings, and research breakthroughs.

Create free account →Browse diseases