On June 9, 2026 RedHill Biopharma Ltd. (Nasdaq: RDHL) ("RedHill" or the "Company"), a specialty biopharmaceutical company, reported that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted rare pediatric disease (RPD) designation to opaganib for treatment of neuroblastoma (NB).
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"Receiving a cancer diagnosis is always distressing, but when it involves your child, it becomes profoundly devastating. There is an ongoing necessity to explore new alternatives that can augment treatment and enhance results for neuroblastoma, the most prevalent cancer in infants. In data from models of high-risk NB (HRNB), presented at AACR (Free AACR Whitepaper) 2026, we saw positive effects of opaganib as a potential add-on to chemotherapy, showing an ability to directly destabilize a key oncogenic driver of neuroblastoma and other solid tumors, n-Myc, through increased ceremide production enhancing programmed cancer cell death (apoptosis)," said Dr. Mark Levitt, Chief Scientific Officer at RedHill. "This rare pediatric disease designation, supported by data from NB and other preclinical oncology models, along with a clinically demonstrated safety and tolerability profile adds to our belief that opaganib holds promise for improving outcomes in treating pediatric NB. We aim to further advance development following ongoing discussions with Penn State University and the Beat Childhood Cancer consortium."
The FDA grant of rare pediatric disease designation to opaganib provides for a Priority Review Voucher (PRV), subject to certain conditions, and with opaganib’s current neuroblastoma orphan drug designation also allows for the potential for seven years’ marketing exclusivity, if approved, accelerated development and review times, FDA Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) application fee waivers and tax credits. The neuroblastoma market is expected to be valued at approximately $3.5 billion in 2032.
Opaganib is a novel, potentially broad acting, oral, small molecule sphingosine kinase-2 (SPHK2) selective inhibitor drug with demonstrated safety & efficacy profiles. It is in development for multiple oncology, viral (including Ebola virus disease (EVD), inflammatory and diabetes and obesity-related indications.
About Neuroblastoma
Neuroblastoma is a type of cancer most commonly affecting babies and young children. While rare, neuroblastoma is the most common infancy cancer with ~5,500 global pediatric cases per year in children aged 0–14. It accounts for 10% of childhood cancers and 15% of pediatric cancer-related deaths in the U.S.5,6. Around 750 children in the United States are diagnosed with neuroblastoma each year7. Approximately half of all neuroblastoma patients have high risk (HRNB) disease which has an overall five-year survival of ~50%8.
Neuroblastoma originates from immature nerve cells (neuroblasts), and most often forms in the adrenal glands – small organs that sit on top of the kidneys – but can also start in nerve cells in the abdomen, chest, neck, or pelvis. The exact cause of neuroblastoma is not well understood, but genetic mutations and abnormalities are known to play a role. Some cases may be linked to genetic syndromes or family history, although most occur sporadically without a clear inherited pattern.
About Opaganib (ABC294640)
Opaganib is a proprietary first-in-class investigational, orally administered sphingosine kinase-2 (SPHK2) selective inhibitor drug. Potentially broad-acting, it is in development for multiple oncology, viral (including Ebola virus disease), inflammatory, metabolic (diabetes and obesity) and additional indications.
Opaganib’s suggested mechanism of action, published in the journal Drug Design, Development and Therapy, is host-directed and potentially broad-acting and is expected to maintain its effect against emerging viral variants. Opaganib is thought to work through the inhibition of multiple pathways, the induction of autophagy and apoptosis, and disruption of viral replication, through simultaneous inhibition of three sphingolipid-metabolizing enzymes in human cells (SPHK2, DES1 and GCS).
Opaganib has received Orphan Drug designation from the FDA for the treatment of neuroblastoma and cholangiocarcinoma. A Bayer-supported 80-patient placebo-controlled randomized Phase 2 study is ongoing to evaluate the efficacy of opaganib in combination with Bayer’s darolutamide in men with metastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), testing the potentially enhancing effect of opaganib in patients with a poor prognosis9. Opaganib also has a Phase 1 chemoradiotherapy study protocol ready for FDA-IND submission.
Opaganib has demonstrated its safety and tolerability profile in more than 470 participants in multiple clinical studies and expanded access use, including a large global Phase 2/3 study in hospitalized patients with moderate to severe COVID-19, published in Microorganisms.
(Press release, RedHill Biopharma, JUN 9, 2026, View Source [SID1234666513])