Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common malignant brain tumour among adult patients and represents an almost universally fatal disease. Novel therapies for GBM are being developed under the orphan drug legislation and the knowledge on the molecular makeup of this disease has been increasing rapidly. However, the clinical outcomes in GBM patients with currently available therapies are still dismal. An insight into the current drug development pipeline for GBM is therefore of particular interest. To provide a quantitative clinical-regulatory insight into the status of FDA orphan drug designations for compounds intended to treat GBM. Quantitative cross-sectional analysis of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Orphan Drug Product database between 1983 and 2020. STROBE criteria were respected. Four orphan drugs out of 161 (2,4%) orphan drug designations were approved for the treatment for GBM by the FDA between 1983 and 2020. Fourteen orphan drug designations were subsequently withdrawn for unknown reasons. The number of orphan drug designations per year shows a growing trend. In the last decade, the therapeutic mechanism of action of designated compounds intended to treat glioblastoma shifted from cytotoxic drugs (median year of designation 2008) to immunotherapeutic approaches and small molecules (median year of designation 2014 and 2015 respectively) suggesting an increased focus on precision in the therapeutic mechanism of action for compounds the development pipeline. Despite the fact that current pharmacological treatment options in GBM are sparse, the drug development pipeline is steadily growing. In particular, the surge of designated immunotherapies detected in the last years raises the hope that elaborate combination possibilities between classical therapeutic backbones (radiotherapy and chemotherapy) and novel, currently experimental therapeutics may help to provide better therapies for this deadly disease in the future.

Highlights

  • High grade gliomas account for the majority of brain tumour related deaths in children and adults

  • Peer Review History: PLOS recognizes the benefits of transparency in the peer review process; we enable the publication of all of the content of peer review and author responses alongside final, published articles

  • Four orphan drugs out of 161 (2,4%) orphan drug designations were approved for the treatment for GBM by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) between 1983 and 2020

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Summary

Introduction

High grade gliomas account for the majority of brain tumour related deaths in children and adults. Albeit being rare in absolute numbers, glioblastomas represent a universally fatal disease class for approximately 15,000 patients per year in the United States [1]. A wealth of studies has identified the typical genetic alterations that occur in glioblastoma: Mutations in IDH1 or, for paediatric glioblastomas, the two frequently occurring histone H3.3 gene mutations (H3.3: pK27M and H3.3: pG34R/V) are just three examples of common genetic mutations that define distinct molecular classes of glioblastoma. Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common malignant brain tumour among adult patients and represents an almost universally fatal disease. Novel therapies for GBM are being developed under the orphan drug legislation and the knowledge on the molecular makeup of this disease has been increasing rapidly. The clinical outcomes in GBM patients with currently available therapies are still dismal. An insight into the current drug development pipeline for GBM is of particular interest

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