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Novel Approaches to Support Therapeutic Development in Ultra-Rare Cancers

ID: RFA-FD-26-004 • Type: Posted
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Description

Background

The FDA Oncology Center of Excellence (OCE) aims to advance the development and regulation of oncology products for patients with cancer. The Pediatric Oncology Program and Rare Cancers Program were established to facilitate and expedite drug development for pediatric and other rare cancers. OCE's Project Catalyst connects scientific knowledge, creative insight, and medical professionals to foster early-stage product innovation, which is particularly important to address the challenges related to product development for ultra-rare cancers. In collaboration with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the OCE, the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health (FNIH) recently launched the design phase of the Ultra-Rare Cancer Treatment Advancement Program (ULTRA), a new public-private partnership dedicated to accelerating the development of innovative ultra-rare cancer treatments.

For the purposes of this NOFO, the FDA OCE refers to cancers with an approximate annual incidence in the U.S. of 300 to 400 people or less as ultra-rare (a more stringent criterion compared to the threshold for a rare disease specified in the Orphan Drug Act based on a U.S. prevalence of <200,000 people).

Many of the challenges involved in drug development for ultra-rare cancers are similar to those for rare diseases and can include:

  • Difficulty enrolling sufficient numbers of patients to clinical trials
  • Limited financial incentives for drug development
  • Insufficient understanding of the cancer pathophysiology, molecular characteristics, and natural history
  • Limited or lack of timely access to molecular testing to determine eligibility for treatment with targeted therapies
  • Complexities associated with designing clinical trials that are adequate to establish safety and effectiveness

Advancing technologies such as single cell multi-omic analyses have helped define some ultra-rare cancers at the molecular level, providing new opportunities for targeted drug development. Pediatric oncology has several examples of tumor types with known translocation-induced, oncogenic driver fusion proteins. Other examples of ultra-rare cancers defined today by molecular pathology include: neuroectodermal tumors, pulmonary blastoma, desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT), epithelioid sarcoma, diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, fibrolamellar carcinoma, and malignant rhabdoid tumors.

Purpose and Research Objectives

The purpose of this NOFO 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.

Specific areas of interest include, but are not limited to, the following examples:

  • 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.
  • Investigations to explore opportunities to develop and validate early clinical endpoints and other novel efficacy endpoints for evaluation of treatments for ultra-rare cancers.
  • 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).
  • 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.
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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.
  • 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).
Background
The FDA Oncology Center of Excellence (OCE) aims to advance the development and regulation of oncology products for patients with cancer. The Pediatric Oncology Program and Rare Cancers Program were established to facilitate and expedite drug development for pediatric and other rare cancers.

OCE’s Project Catalyst connects scientific knowledge, creative insight, and medical professionals to foster early-stage product innovation, which is particularly important to address the challenges related to product development for ultra-rare cancers. In collaboration with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the OCE, the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health (FNIH) recently launched the design phase of the Ultra-Rare Cancer Treatment Advancement Program (ULTRA), a new public-private partnership dedicated to accelerating the development of innovative ultra-rare cancer treatments.

The FDA OCE defines ultra-rare cancers as those with an approximate annual incidence in the U.S. of 300 to 400 people or less.

Grant Details
The purpose of this NOFO 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. Specific areas of interest include:
1) Development of infrastructure for a coordination network and data repository for patient-level data across institutions;
2) Investigations to explore opportunities to develop and validate early clinical endpoints;
3) Collaborative efforts to generate real-world data leveraging a registry framework;
4) Innovative approaches for clinical development of previously approved drugs in ultra-rare cancers;
5) Research on preserving availability of drugs discontinued by commercial developers;
6) Incorporation of telemedicine methods for patient assessments;
7) Development of nanoparticle-based delivery approaches targeting onco-fusion transcription factors;
8) Characterization of plasma-membrane protein expression in ultra-rare cancers.

Eligibility Requirements
Eligible organizations include higher education institutions (public/private), nonprofits, for-profit organizations (including small businesses), local governments, federal agencies, Indian/Native American tribal governments, independent school districts, public housing authorities, faith-based organizations, regional organizations.

Period of Performance
The maximum project period is three years with an initial funding commitment for one year contingent upon annual appropriations.

Grant Value
FDA OCE intends to commit up to $1,500,000 in FY 2026 to fund 1-3 awards. Each award may provide up to $500,000 per year.

Overview

Category of Funding
Agriculture
Consumer Protection
Food and Nutrition
Funding Instruments
Cooperative Agreement
Grant Category
Discretionary
Cost Sharing / Matching Requirement
False
Source
On 5/4/26 Food and Drug Administration posted grant opportunity RFA-FD-26-004 for Novel Approaches to Support Therapeutic Development in Ultra-Rare Cancers with funding of $1.5 million. The grant will be issued under grant program 93.103 Food and Drug Administration Research. It is expected that 3 total grants will be made.

Timing

Posted Date
May 4, 2026, 12:00 a.m. EDT
Closing Date
June 15, 2026, 12:00 a.m. EDT Past Due
Last Updated
May 4, 2026, 3:27 p.m. EDT
Version
1
Archive Date
July 15, 2026

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants
Independent school districts
Native American tribal organizations (other than Federally recognized tribal governments)
Public and State controlled institutions of higher education
Nonprofits that do not have a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education
Public housing authorities/Indian housing authorities
Small businesses
State governments
County governments
Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education
Private institutions of higher education
Special district governments
For profit organizations other than small businesses
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments

Award Sizing

Ceiling
$500,000
Floor
Not Listed
Estimated Program Funding
$1,500,000
Estimated Number of Grants
3

Contacts

Contact
Patrick Johnson Grantor
Email Description
FDA Contact
Contact Phone
(301) 796-0154

Documents

Posted documents for RFA-FD-26-004

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