![]()
LifeArc will bring the Rare Therapies Launch Pad into its organisation, accelerating the development and access of personalised medicines for rare diseases.
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM, June 24, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — LifeArc, a self-funded medical research organisation, has today announced that it will integrate the Rare Therapies Launch Pad (RTLP) into its organisation, marking an important next step in efforts to accelerate the development, delivery and access of individualised medicines for people living with rare diseases.
The RTLP is a UK-led, multi-stakeholder initiative established by partners including Genomics England, The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry, University of Oxford, Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre, Mila’s Miracle Foundation, Great Ormond Street Hospital, University College London and the Yu Lab. It has played a central role in bringing together clinical, regulatory, academic, industry and patient expertise to address one of the biggest challenges in rare disease: how to turn advances in genetics and molecular science into treatments that can be developed and delivered, at scale, for individual patients.
As part of this next phase, the programme will become the LifeArc Rare Therapies Launch Pad, with LifeArc providing a long-term institutional home to build on the progress achieved to date and support the continued development of a more coordinated UK pathway for individualised medicines.
LifeArc brings established expertise in rare disease translation, underpinned by its scientific, clinical, and convening capabilities to drive promising research progress towards patient impact and to shape and implement innovative pathways for rare diseases therapeutics development and access.
The RTLP has established strong momentum across the UK rare disease ecosystem, including supporting the development of a world-first regulatory master protocol for individualised medicines, approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. This approach shows how flexible regulation can enable the safe and efficient development and clinical translation of individualised medicines.
In bringing the RTLP into its fold, LifeArc will provide dedicated programme leadership and coordination, while connecting the initiative more closely with LifeArc’s existing work in rare diseases therapeutics development, clinical trials, health data and regulatory engagement. LifeArc will be recruiting a dedicated director to lead the programme, convene partners across the system and support progress on key challenges including regulation, clinical development, patient identification and wider access.
The LifeArc Rare Therapies Launch Pad will continue to work closely with the established RTLP community and its working groups, building on the collaboration and momentum already in place while focusing on areas where it can have the greatest impact, with the aim of translating scientific progress and system-level change into patient benefit more effectively.
Commenting on the announcement, Sam Barrell, Chief Executive Officer at LifeArc, said: “Individualised medicines hold enormous promise for people living with rare diseases, but delivering them in practice requires coordinated effort across the whole system.
“The Rare Therapies Launch Pad has shown what can be achieved when partners come together around a shared goal. Bringing this work into LifeArc provides the platform, capability and long-term support needed to build on that progress and accelerate patient impact.”
Dr Dan O’Connor, Chair of the RTLP Board, said: “The RTLP has built a strong collaborative foundation over recent years, and this next step ensures that momentum continues.
“Within LifeArc, the programme is well placed to further develop the pathways needed for individualised medicines and to deliver meaningful impact for patients and the wider healthcare community.”
Julia Vitarello, Founder and CEO of Mila’s Miracle Foundation, a founding partner of the RTLP, said: “The Rare Therapies Launch Pad was created to move beyond discussions and actually demonstrate the system that needs to be in place for patients to access individualised medicines at scale.
“This next phase of the RTLP is critical as the UK regulatory framework opens up, and no one is better suited than LifeArc to ensure that key organizations work together with urgency to show the world how this can be done.”
Notes to editors
• For more information, please contact Hannah Perlin at hannah.perlin@lifearc.org
• LifeArc will be recruiting a director to lead the LifeArc RTLP. The job description will be posted on the vacancies page of LifeArc’s website.
• LifeArc is a self-funded medical research organisation turning promising science into patient impact, with a focus on rare diseases and drug-resistant infections. It leads, funds, partners and convenes, bringing its expertise and resources to advance innovation where progress might otherwise stall, helping new medical breakthroughs reach patients faster. LifeArc is a charity registered in England and Wales under no. 1015243 and in Scotland under no. SC037861.
• RTLP Board of Directors past and present include, Dan O’Connor (Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry, and current Chair); Nicola Blackwood (past Chair); Julia Vitarello (Mila’s Miracle Foundation); Matthew Brown (formerly representing Genomics England); Matthew Wood (University of Oxford and Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre); Martin Murphy (independent life science investor); Michael Parker (University of Oxford); and Parker Moss (Wellcome Leap).
• The RTLP Board has been supported by the Interim Executive Director, Vanessa Newman, who has provided strategic leadership and operational oversight throughout a period of significant growth and transition, helping to position RTLP for its next phase within LifeArc.
Hannah Perlin
LifeArc
+447483641639 ext.
hannah.perlin@lifearc.org
Visit us on social media:
LinkedIn
Bluesky
YouTube
X
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
![]()
Media gallery
