Friday, July 10, 2026

pharma · Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) · Melanoma · IRON

Disc Medicine

Disc Medicine is a pharma organization headquartered in Watertown, USA. It trades on NYSE under ticker IRON. Primary therapeutic focus areas include Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), Melanoma, Parkinson's disease, Falcip

321 Arsenal St., Suite 101, Watertown, Massachusetts 02472-5710, US HQ
165 Employees
Public company Type
IRON · NYSE Ticker
Company details
Status
Public
HQ
321 Arsenal St., Suite 101, Watertown, Massachusetts 02472-5710, US
Employees
165
Programs
308
Drugs
443
Patents
706
Clinical program

14341

Phase 1 · other · Glioma

Vemurafenib (ZELBORAF) is an oral antineoplastic agent being evaluated in the ReDiReCCT (Repurposed Drugs in Research and Cancer Clinical Trials) trial for glioma treatment. Originally approved as a BRAF inhibitor for melanoma, this program represents a drug repurposing strategy sponsored by Disc Medicine to explore ve

Internal code 14341

At a glance

Sponsor
Disc Medicine
Phase
Phase 1
Modality
other
Indication
Glioma
Status
active
Trials
1

Executive summary

Vemurafenib (ZELBORAF) is an oral antineoplastic agent being evaluated in the ReDiReCCT (Repurposed Drugs in Research and Cancer Clinical Trials) trial for glioma treatment. Originally approved as a BRAF inhibitor for melanoma, this program represents a drug repurposing strategy sponsored by Disc Medicine to explore vemurafenib's efficacy in glioma, a distinct oncology indication. The trial is currently in Phase 1 and remains active. Vemurafenib is already approved in multiple jurisdictions: the United States (FDA, NDA 202429), European Union (EMA authorization 19/06/2025), and Australia (TGA, listed 01/04/2017). The repurposing approach leverages an established safety and pharmacology profile to accelerate clinical evaluation in a new indication. No mechanism of action, specific target, or lead investigator details have been disclosed for this glioma program. Key regulatory milestones and expected next clinical progression dates remain not yet disclosed.

Analyst view

Why this program matters

Glioma represents a significant unmet medical need with limited treatment options and poor prognosis, particularly for high-grade tumors. Drug repurposing strategies offer potential advantages by reducing development timelines and costs compared to de novo drug discovery, while leveraging established safety databases. Vemurafenib's mechanism as a BRAF inhibitor may have relevance in glioma subtypes harboring BRAF mutations, though this has not been explicitly confirmed in the disclosed facts. The ReDiReCCT trial's Phase 1 status indicates early-stage evaluation of tolerability and preliminary efficacy signals in this new indication.

From a competitive standpoint, the glioma market includes multiple approved antineoplastic agents (AFINITOR, OFEV, KYPROLIS, and others listed in the competitive landscape), though these represent different mechanisms and indications. The repurposing of an already-approved drug may offer regulatory and commercial advantages if efficacy is demonstrated, potentially enabling faster market access than novel agents. Patient populations with glioma, particularly those with BRAF-mutant tumors, represent a defined but limited market segment. Commercial significance depends on trial outcomes, regulatory decisions, and differentiation from existing glioma therapies.

Drug intelligence

Drug Class: Antineoplastic and immunomodulating agent (ATC L01)

Modality: Small molecule (oral)

Route of Administration: Oral

Brand Name: ZELBORAF

International Nonproprietary Name (INN): Vemurafenib

Mechanism of Action: Not disclosed for this glioma program; however, vemurafenib is established as a BRAF kinase inhibitor approved for melanoma.

Target: Not disclosed for this glioma program.

Related Therapies: Other approved antineoplastic agents in the competitive landscape include IMBRUVICA (Janssen-Cilag), AFINITOR (Novartis), KYPROLIS (Amgen), INLYTA (Pfizer), and OFEV (Boehringer Ingelheim).

First Approval: Vemurafenib was approved in Australia on 01/04/2017 and in the European Union on 19/06/2025; U.S. approval via NDA 202429 (date not specified in facts).

Patent Status: Not disclosed.

Disease intelligence

glioma

Also known as: glial neoplasm, glial tumor, glial tumour, neoplasm of neuroglia, neoplasm of the neuroglia, neuroglial neoplasm

Prevalence: Point prevalence: 1-5 / 10 000 (Europe) — source: Orphanet, validated.

Overview

A benign or malignant brain and spinal cord tumor that arises from glial cells (astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, ependymal cells). Tumors that arise from astrocytes are called astrocytic tumors or astrocytomas. Tumors that arise from oligodendrocytes are called oligodendroglial tumors. Tumors that arise from ependymal cells are called ependymomas.

Treatment landscape

ClinicalTrials.gov lists 517 registered studies for Glioma (AACT aggregate).

Phase breakdown: NA (265), PHASE1 (85), PHASE2 (82), PHASE1/PHASE2 (33), EARLY_PHASE1 (29), PHASE3 (13), PHASE2/PHASE3 (7), PHASE4 (3)

Common investigational therapies:

  • Temozolomide
  • Bevacizumab
  • Chemotherapy
  • Placebo
  • Vorasidenib
  • Gemcitabine
  • Cyclophosphamide
  • Pembrolizumab
  • Irinotecan
  • Thalidomide
Classification: MONDO MONDO:0021042 ORPHA 182067 MeSH D005910

Disease data sourced from MONDO Disease Ontology (MONDO:0021042), Orphanet — glioma, NCT00001150, NCT00001336, NCT00001341, NCT00001444, NCT00001500, AACT (ClinicalTrials.gov aggregate), ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00001148, NCT00001171, NCT00001502, NCT00001573, NCT00009035, Open Targets Platform (CC BY 4.0).

Clinical development timeline

  1. Phase 1TBD

    ReDiReCCT Trial Phase 1 Active

    Vemurafenib Phase 1 trial for glioma ongoing; no enrollment completion or progression dates disclosed.

Competitive landscape

The glioma treatment landscape includes multiple approved antineoplastic agents across different mechanisms and indications. Competitors identified in the facts include AFINITOR (Novartis), KYPROLIS (Amgen), IMBRUVICA (Janssen-Cilag), INLYTA (Pfizer), OFEV (Boehringer Ingelheim), LYSODREN, LYNOZYFIC (Regeneron), VYXEOS LIPOSOMAL (Jazz Pharmaceuticals), UNITUXIN (United Therapeutics), PACLITAXEL ACCORD (Accord Healthcare), and ARX-IMATINIB (Alphapharm). Most are approved in Australia and/or other major markets. Vemurafenib's competitive positioning as a repurposed BRAF inhibitor in glioma remains unclear pending Phase 1 data; differentiation would depend on efficacy, safety, and patient selection (e.g., BRAF-mutant tumors). The established approval status and known safety profile of vemurafenib may offer advantages over novel agents, but clinical efficacy in glioma has not yet been demonstrated in the disclosed facts.

TherapyCompanyMechanismStatus
PFIZER AUSTRALIA PTY LTDPfizer Australia Pty Ltdapproved
IMBRUVICAJanssen-Cilag Pty Ltdapproved
AFINITORNovartis Pharmaceuticalsapproved
LYSODRENS.A.approved
INLYTAPfizer Australia Pty Ltdapproved
LYNOZYFICRegeneron UK Limitedapproved
VYXEOS LIPOSOMAL (PREVIOUSLY VYXEOS)Jazz Pharmaceuticals Ireland Limitedapproved
KYPROLISAmgenapproved
UNITUXINUnited Therapeutics Europe Ltdapproved
PACLITAXEL ACCORDAccord Healthcare Pty.approved
OFEVBoehringer Ingelheim Pty Ltdapproved
ARX-IMATINIBAlphapharm Pty Ltdapproved
EVEROLIMUSFK506-binding protein 1A inhibitorApproved
CARMUSTINEGlutathione reductase inhibitorApproved
BEVACIZUMABVascular endothelial growth factor A inhibitorApproved
VINCRISTINE SULFATETubulin inhibitorPhase 3
VINCRISTINETubulin inhibitorPhase 3
TRANEXAMIC ACIDPlasminogen inhibitorPhase 3
TRABEDERSENTransforming growth factor beta-2 mRNA antisense inhibitorPhase 3
TOVORAFENIBRAF serine/threonine protein kinase inhibitorPhase 3

Additional associated therapies sourced from Open Targets Platform (CC0), linked to NovaPharmaNews drug profiles where matched.

Regulatory intelligence

United States (FDA): Vemurafenib approved via NDA 202429; sponsor Hoffmann La Roche. Specific approval date not disclosed.

European Union (EMA): Vemurafenib (ZELBORAF) authorized 19/06/2025; Marketing Authorization Holder: Roche Registration GmbH; EMA Product Number EMEA/H/C/002409.

Australia (TGA): Vemurafenib listed 01/04/2017; PBS codes 11076Y and 11081F; sponsor Roche Products Pty Ltd.

China (NMPA): Vemurafenib in clinical trials; NCT04423185 registered for China.

Japan (PMDA): Regulatory status not disclosed.

ReDiReCCT Trial (Glioma Indication): Phase 1 status; sponsor Disc Medicine; NCT ID 2025-523340-12-00. No regulatory milestones, expected approval timelines, or label expansion plans disclosed.

Clinical evidence summary

2025-523340-12-00

Objective
Not disclosed; presumed to evaluate vemurafenib tolerability and preliminary efficacy in glioma.
Design
Phase 1; design details not disclosed.
Participants
Number of participants and inclusion/exclusion criteria not disclosed.
Primary endpoint
Not disclosed.
Results
Results not yet reported.

Key questions answered

What is vemurafenib used for?

Vemurafenib (ZELBORAF) is an approved antineoplastic agent. It is currently being evaluated in the ReDiReCCT Phase 1 trial for glioma treatment; its established indication is melanoma.

Is vemurafenib approved by the FDA?

Yes, vemurafenib is FDA-approved via NDA 202429 under sponsor Hoffmann La Roche; the specific approval date is not disclosed in the facts.

Is vemurafenib approved in Europe?

Yes, vemurafenib (ZELBORAF) received EMA authorization on 19/06/2025; Marketing Authorization Holder is Roche Registration GmbH (EMEA/H/C/002409).

Is vemurafenib approved in Australia?

Yes, vemurafenib was listed on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods on 01/04/2017 by Roche Products Pty Ltd (PBS codes 11076Y and 11081F).

What is the ReDiReCCT trial?

ReDiReCCT (Repurposed Drugs in Research and Cancer Clinical Trials) is a Phase 1 trial sponsored by Disc Medicine evaluating vemurafenib in glioma; it is currently active (NCT ID 2025-523340-12-00).

Who is sponsoring the glioma trial?

Disc Medicine is the sponsor of the ReDiReCCT trial evaluating vemurafenib in glioma.

What is the mechanism of action of vemurafenib?

Vemurafenib is a BRAF kinase inhibitor; however, the specific mechanism of action for the glioma indication has not been disclosed.

How is vemurafenib administered?

Vemurafenib is administered orally as a tablet.

What is the current development phase of vemurafenib for glioma?

Vemurafenib for glioma is in Phase 1 development and currently active; no progression to Phase 2 has been disclosed.

What is the drug class of vemurafenib?

Vemurafenib is classified as an antineoplastic and immunomodulating agent (ATC L01).

Who manufactures vemurafenib?

Roche manufactures vemurafenib; regulatory approvals list Hoffmann La Roche (FDA), Roche Registration GmbH (EMA), and Roche Products Pty Ltd (Australia) as sponsors/MAHs.

Are there competing therapies for glioma?

Yes; approved competitors include AFINITOR (Novartis), KYPROLIS (Amgen), IMBRUVICA (Janssen-Cilag), INLYTA (Pfizer), OFEV (Boehringer Ingelheim), and others listed in the competitive landscape.

What is the indication for the ReDiReCCT trial?

The indication is glioma; vemurafenib is being evaluated as a repurposed drug for this oncology indication.

Has vemurafenib shown efficacy in glioma?

Clinical trial results for vemurafenib in glioma have not yet been reported; the Phase 1 trial is ongoing.

What is the expected timeline for glioma trial results?

Expected milestones and completion dates for the ReDiReCCT trial have not been disclosed.

Is vemurafenib in clinical trials in China?

Yes; vemurafenib is listed as in clinical trials in China (NCT04423185), though this may refer to a different indication than glioma.

Entity relationship graph

14341 → Drug → Target → Indication → Company → Trials → Competitors

Evidence-based

Analyst insights

Strategic Implications: Disc Medicine's sponsorship of the ReDiReCCT trial represents a drug repurposing strategy to extend vemurafenib's clinical utility beyond melanoma. This approach may reduce development risk and timelines compared to novel agents, leveraging an established safety and pharmacology database. Success in glioma could support label expansion and market differentiation.

Competitive Implications: If Phase 1 data support progression, vemurafenib would compete in a crowded glioma market with multiple approved antineoplastic agents. Differentiation would likely depend on efficacy in BRAF-mutant glioma subtypes and favorable tolerability. The repurposed status offers no inherent competitive advantage over mechanism-specific competitors unless clinical outcomes are superior.

Future Catalysts: Phase 1 data readout and decision to advance to Phase 2; potential biomarker-driven patient selection (BRAF mutation status); regulatory feedback on indication strategy; competitive trial data from other glioma agents.

Expected Milestones: Phase 1 completion and safety/efficacy summary; Phase 2 initiation (if warranted); regulatory interactions with FDA/EMA on development pathway; potential label expansion if approved.

Quick answers

Concise, citable answers optimized for AI answer engines.

What is vemurafenib?
Oral antineoplastic BRAF inhibitor approved for melanoma; now being evaluated for glioma.
Brand name?
ZELBORAF
Indication in ReDiReCCT?
Glioma
Current phase?
Phase 1
Sponsor?
Disc Medicine
Route of administration?
Oral
Mechanism of action?
BRAF kinase inhibitor (established); specific MOA for glioma not disclosed.
FDA approved?
Yes, NDA 202429; specific date not disclosed.
EMA approved?
Yes, authorized 19/06/2025; EMEA/H/C/002409.
Australia approved?
Yes, listed 01/04/2017; PBS codes 11076Y, 11081F.
Trial NCT ID?
2025-523340-12-00
Status?
Active
Partner?
Not disclosed
Lead investigator?
Not disclosed
Target?
Not disclosed for glioma indication
Modality?
Small molecule (oral)
Therapeutic class?
Antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents (L01)
Expected LOE date?
Not disclosed
Peak sales projection?
Not disclosed
First disclosed date?
Not disclosed
Latest milestone?
ReDiReCCT trial active; no recent update date disclosed.
Key competitors?
AFINITOR, KYPROLIS, IMBRUVICA, INLYTA, OFEV, others.

Evidence & sources

Reviewed by NovaPharmaNews Intelligence Desk. Last reviewed .

  1. ClinicalTrials.gov 2025-523340-12-00 (clinicaltrials)
  2. vemurafenib AU status (fda)
  3. vemurafenib CN status (fda)
  4. vemurafenib EU status (ema)
  5. vemurafenib US status (fda)
  6. Source: phase (source_attribution)
  7. MONDO Disease Ontology (MONDO:0021042) (mondo)
  8. Orphanet — glioma (orphanet)
  9. NCT00001150 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  10. NCT00001336 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  11. NCT00001341 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  12. NCT00001444 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  13. NCT00001500 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  14. AACT (ClinicalTrials.gov aggregate) (aact)
  15. ClinicalTrials.gov (clinicaltrials_gov)
  16. NCT00001148 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  17. NCT00001171 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  18. NCT00001502 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  19. NCT00001573 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  20. NCT00009035 (clinicaltrials_gov)
  21. Open Targets Platform (opentargets)

Intelligence compiled from public regulatory and clinical sources (FDA, EMA, ClinicalTrials.gov and company disclosures). Figures may be editorial or analyst estimates; verify against primary sources before relying on them.