EU/3/22/2648 - orphan designation for treatment of malignant mesothelioma
thiostrepton
OrphanHuman
On Monday, 12 January 2026, between 07:00 and 10:00 CET (Amsterdam time), this website will be unavailable due to scheduled maintenance.
This medicine was designated as an orphan medicine for the treatment of malignant mesothelioma in the European Union on 18 July 2022.
This means that the developer will receive scientific and regulatory support from EMA to advance their medicine to the stage where they can apply for a marketing authorisation.
Orphan designation does not mean the medicine is available or authorised for use. All medicines, including designated orphan medicines, must be authorised before they can be marketed and made available to patients in the EU.
During the medicine's development, doctors may be able to enrol patients in clinical trials investigating the medicine. For information on ongoing clinical trials in the EU, see:
All cells have a specialized compartment that produces energy, necessary for life. In this process, cells produce toxic by-products which are converted to water by an enzyme called peroxiredoxin 3. In malignant mesothelioma, long-term inflammation caused by asbestos exposure causes this process to become hyperactive, causing normal cells to change and become cancerous. Thiostrepton is expected to block the action of peroxiredoxin 3, resulting in the build-up of a substance called hydrogen peroxide to levels which destroy these cancerous cells without affecting normal cells.
Based on description provided by sponsor
At the time of submission of the application for orphan designation:
More information on how potential new medicines are tested during their development is available on Authorisation of medicines.
Medicines intended for rare diseases can be granted an orphan designation during their development.
The orphan designation allows the developer to benefit from:
To qualify for orphan designation, a medicine must meet a number of criteria:
EMA's Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products (COMP) is responsible for issuing opinions on applications for orphan designations.
The Agency sends the COMP opinion to the European Commission, which is responsible for granting the orphan designation. The full list of orphan designations is available in the Community register of orphan medicinal products for human use.
For more information, see:
EMA Regulatory Submissions Expediter Limited
Ground Floor
Investment House
8-34 Percy Place
Dublin D04 P5K3
Ireland
E-mail: info@rsoncology.com
EMA publishes information on orphan medicinal product designation adopted by the Committee for Orphan Medicinal Products (COMP) on the IRIS online platform:
For contact details of patients’ organisations whose activities are targeted at rare diseases, see:
European Organisation for Rare Diseases (EURORDIS), a non-governmental alliance of patient organisations and individuals active in the field of rare diseases.
Orphanet, a database containing information on rare diseases, which includes a directory of patients’ organisations registered in Europe.
The list of medicines that have received an orphan designation in the EU is available on the European Commission's website: