Sanofi’s Rilzabrutinib Receives Orphan Designation for IgG4-Related Disease

By HEOR Staff Writer

August 15, 2025

rilzabrutinib IgG4-related disease

Sanofi’s rilzabrutinib has received orphan drug designation from the European Medicines Agency for treating IgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD). This reversible covalent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor earned the designation based on promising Phase 2 study results. The findings, presented at the EULAR 2025 Congress, showed reduced disease flares, improved disease markers, and a glucocorticoid-sparing effect after 52 weeks of treatment. This marks a major advancement for IgG4-RD patients. The milestone highlights Sanofi’s dedication to rare, immune-mediated diseases.

Key Insights

Rilzabrutinib could address an unmet need in IgG4-related disease. Phase 2 results demonstrated clinical benefits, including fewer disease flares and reduced steroid use. Chronic steroid treatment often leads to long-term complications. Rilzabrutinib’s safety profile remained consistent, with no new concerns, supporting a favorable risk-benefit balance.

The orphan designation is strategic. It applies to rare conditions affecting ≤5 in 10,000 EU individuals. Benefits include market exclusivity, lower fees, and development support.

IgG4-related disease is a systemic autoimmune disorder. It involves IgG4-positive plasma cells infiltrating tissues, causing organ dysfunction. The European Medicines Agency’s orphan drug program encourages rare disease treatments, similar to the FDA’s initiative.

BTK inhibitors like rilzabrutinib are effective in autoimmune and hematologic conditions. The BTK pathway is crucial for B-cell activation, and rilzabrutinib’s reversible covalent binding may improve safety over irreversible inhibitors.

The glucocorticoid-sparing effect is clinically important. Long-term steroid use can cause osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and infections.

Implications

Health Economics Impact: Orphan designation may influence treatment costs and resource use. While orphan drugs are costly, steroid-sparing effects could reduce complications and healthcare needs. Fewer flares may lower hospital visits and monitoring.

Clinical Outcomes Research: This opens avenues for rare disease research, including patient-reported outcomes and quality-of-life measures. The 52-week study provides sustained benefit data, but long-term real-world studies are needed.

Market Access Considerations: Orphan status eases EU approval, but cost-effectiveness assessments remain. Rare diseases challenge standard pharmacoeconomic models, requiring innovative value demonstrations.

For more details, see the original press release here.

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