Opus Genetics' OPGx-LCA5 Gene Therapy Accepted Into FDA's Rare Disease Evidence Program
Opus Genetics announces FDA acceptance of OPGx-LCA5 gene therapy into RDEP program, advancing treatment for inherited retinal disease LCA5.
Key Takeaways
- FDA accepts Opus Genetics’ OPGx-LCA5 gene therapy into the Rare Disease Evidence Principles (RDEP) program
- RDEP acceptance provides regulatory pathway advantages for developing treatments for LCA5, a rare inherited retinal disease
- Program participation may accelerate clinical development and approval timeline for this vision-restoring gene therapy
Opus Genetics, Inc. (Nasdaq: IRD) announced May 4, 2026, that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has accepted its investigational gene therapy OPGx-LCA5 into the Rare Disease Evidence Principles (RDEP) program. The Research Triangle Park-based company develops gene therapies for inherited retinal diseases (IRDs).
What is the RDEP Program?
The FDA’s Rare Disease Evidence Principles program provides a framework for drug developers working on treatments for rare diseases with limited treatment options. RDEP acceptance offers regulatory guidance on clinical trial design, endpoints, and evidence requirements tailored to rare disease challenges.
OPGx-LCA5 Target Condition
OPGx-LCA5 targets Leber congenital amaurosis type 5 (LCA5), a severe inherited retinal disease caused by mutations in the LCA5 gene. Patients with LCA5 typically experience severe vision loss or blindness from early childhood due to photoreceptor cell dysfunction.
Clinical Development Advantages
RDEP program participation provides several potential benefits for Opus Genetics:
- Regulatory clarity: Enhanced FDA guidance on clinical trial design and regulatory requirements
- Flexible endpoints: Potential for novel or surrogate endpoints appropriate for rare disease populations
- Streamlined approval: Possible expedited review pathways for promising therapies
Market Impact
The acceptance represents a significant regulatory milestone for Opus Genetics’ gene therapy pipeline. With limited treatment options available for LCA5 patients, successful development of OPGx-LCA5 could address a critical unmet medical need in the inherited retinal disease market.
Gene therapies for rare eye diseases have shown promise, with several FDA-approved treatments demonstrating the potential for vision restoration in previously untreatable conditions.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does RDEP acceptance mean for LCA5 patients?
RDEP acceptance may accelerate OPGx-LCA5 development by providing clearer regulatory pathways, potentially bringing this vision-restoring gene therapy to patients faster than traditional development timelines.
When will OPGx-LCA5 be available to patients?
The therapy is still in clinical development. RDEP acceptance is an early regulatory milestone, but patients should expect several years of clinical trials before potential FDA approval and commercial availability.
How does gene therapy work for inherited retinal diseases?
Gene therapy delivers functional copies of defective genes directly to retinal cells, potentially restoring normal protein production and improving or preserving vision in patients with genetic mutations causing blindness.



