Licensing Opportunity for the First Therapeutic to Target Developmental Stuttering
NIH inventors have developed the first pharmacologic option for developmental stuttering, which is currently only managed by speech therapy, but addresses a $3 billion underserved global market. This technology uses small-molecule iron chelators – drugs that bind and remove excess iron – for the oral treatment of developmental stuttering in children and adults. Mouse models have shown that using daily low-dose deferiprone reverses speech deficits while normalizing brain-iron MRI signals. Since exemplary chelators deferiprone, deferasirox, and deferoxamine are already marketed for other indications, their safety, dosing, and manufacturing are well characterized, enabling a streamlined regulatory path.
This technology could be used as a stand-alone or adjunctive pharmacotherapy for persistent developmental stuttering in pediatric and adult populations, for MRI-guided precision treatment platform for speech-motor disorders linked to basal-ganglia iron dysregulation, and/or expand into related neurodevelopmental or movement disorders where excess neural iron contributes to pathophysiology.
There are multiple competitive advantages of this potential therapeutic, including:
- First-in-class, mechanism-based therapy for stuttering, addressing a $3 B underserved global market with no approved drugs.
- Repurposes FDA-approved iron chelators, leveraging extensive safety data and oral formulations for rapid Phase II entry and lower development risk.
- Quantifiable biomarker (MRI R2* brain-iron signal) enables patient stratification and objective efficacy read-outs, enhancing trial efficiency and market differentiation.
NIH inventors at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke are seeking a licensee for this technology. If you are interested in learning more or contacting the licensing manager, you can do so via the abstract: Oral Iron-Chelator Therapy for Treating Developmental Stuttering