Bridging Nations. Accelerating Therapies for Rare Diseases Together.
HERNDON, VA, UNITED STATES, February 27, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — On the occasion of International Rare Disease Day 2026, IndoUSrare reaffirms its bold 2030 vision: No rare disease clinical research or orphan drug development program should proceed without meaningful engagement of the Indian and broader South Asian diaspora through IndoUSrare or aligned global channels. Grounded in patient-first principles, strengthened by cross-border collaboration, and powered by responsible AI innovation, IndoUSrare is advancing a measurable roadmap to accelerate therapies and improve outcomes for families affected by rare diseases worldwide.
International Rare Disease Day is more than a moment of awareness. For Indo US Organization for Rare Diseases (IndoUSrare), it is a call to structured action.
Founded and chaired by Harsha K. Rajasimha, IndoUSrare has built a unique Indo-US bridge connecting patient advocacy, precision genomics, translational research, emerging technologies, and orphan drug development. The organization’s 2030 vision institutionalizes diaspora engagement as a standard pillar of rare disease innovation, not as an optional collaboration, but as an operational necessity.
IndoUSrare’s work is rooted first and foremost in patients and families. Every program initiated, patient registries launched, every dialogue hosted, and every research collaboration convened is designed to reduce diagnostic delays, improve trial access, and bring scientifically rigorous therapies closer to communities that have historically been overlooked.
As part of its Rare Disease Day observance, IndoUSrare leadership and community members will participate in the Rare Disease Day at NIH (RDDNIH) event on February 27, 2026, on the National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda, Maryland. This engagement reflects IndoUSrare’s commitment to ensuring that diaspora voices, patient experiences, and cross-border scientific collaboration are visible within the world’s leading biomedical research ecosystem.
Participation at NIH underscores a core belief: global rare disease acceleration must integrate federal research institutions, patient communities, industry innovators, and diaspora networks into a coordinated ecosystem.
Innovation in Rare Disease: Dr. Kartha in Conversation with Professor Levine:
#RDDIndoUSrare Virtual Dialogue – February 28, 2026 | 10 AM ET | 8:30 PM IST
Continuing its Rare Disease Day programming, IndoUSrare will host a global dialogue titled: “Innovation in Rare Diseases: Dr. Kartha in Conversation with Professor Levine.” The conversation will feature: Professor James Levine, MD, MBA, PhD, President, Fondation Ipsen and Reena Kartha, MS, PhD, IndoUSrare and University of Minnesota. The program also includes a Meet and Greet with Pitch4Rare winners, highlighting emerging innovators from CRISPR Bits, Iuva Labs, and Kaiteki Innovations. This dialogue reflects IndoUSrare’s commitment to connecting established global leaders with next-generation innovators — while centering patient impact in every discussion.
Rare Disease Day is positioned not as symbolic recognition, but as strategic alignment — bringing together patients, scientists, clinicians, entrepreneurs, and policy leaders in a shared mission to shorten the distance between discovery and delivery.
AI for Rare Disease: From Innovation to Impact
Artificial Intelligence represents one of the most transformative tools available to the rare disease community. However, IndoUSrare emphasizes that AI must be deployed responsibly, ethically, and with direct benefit to patients and families.
IndoUSrare’s roadmap integrates AI across:
– Early disease pattern recognition
– Diagnostic support and genomic interpretation
– Natural history data analytics
– Clinical trial feasibility modeling
– Patient matching and recruitment acceleration
– Real-world evidence generation
Recognizing that technology alone is insufficient, IndoUSrare is actively nurturing the next generation of scientists, clinicians, and AI engineers through its structured internship and mentorship programs. These programs provide students and early-career professionals exposure to real-world rare disease challenges — combining biomedical science, data science, policy understanding, and patient advocacy. By cultivating young innovators who understand both AI systems and patient realities, IndoUSrare is investing in sustainable long-term transformation rather than short-term technological hype.
For families navigating rare diagnoses, AI-enabled tools hold promise in reducing years-long diagnostic odysseys, enabling earlier intervention, and improving access to trials and therapies. IndoUSrare’s model ensures these technologies are built with community engagement and scientific rigor at the core.
From Awareness to Acceleration: The 2026–2030 Roadmap
International Rare Disease Day must translate into tangible outcomes. IndoUSrare’s strategic priorities for 2026–2030 include:
– Expansion of global patient registry collaboration
– Cross-border clinical trial activation pathways
– Diaspora-driven patient outreach and feasibility support
– Public-private and academic partnerships
– Responsible AI integration across the rare disease lifecycle
– Global access and affordability frameworks
The US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., today announced the adoption of plausible mechanism of action (common sense) approach for orphan drugs for rare diseases. Inspired by the medical miracles that saved baby KJ and Mila, the US FDA is taking a bold leap forward to provide regulatory flexibility for patients with ultra-rare conditions, said FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, M.D., M.P.H., and we welcome it.
India and the global Indian diaspora represent both an under-leveraged patient population and a powerful scientific and entrepreneurial force in genomics, biotechnology, and digital health. IndoUSrare is positioning this collective strength as a catalytic engine for rare disease progress worldwide.
A Mission Sustained by Partnership
IndoUSrare’s work is mission-driven and community-centered. Its programs — from patient engagement to educational events, from internship initiatives to cross-border convenings — are made possible through the collaboration of strategic partners, institutional allies, and philanthropic supporters who share a commitment to equitable rare disease progress. Sustained impact in rare disease requires not only innovation, but long-term partnership and shared responsibility. IndoUSrare continues to build alliances with stakeholders who recognize that accelerating therapies for rare diseases is both a scientific challenge and a moral imperative.
The 2030 Commitment
By 2030, IndoUSrare envisions:
– Diaspora engagement embedded in rare disease programs as standard practice
– Seamless Indo-US translational research collaboration
– Reduced diagnostic delays for underserved populations
– AI-enhanced patient identification and trial access
– Stronger regulatory and scientific harmonization pathways
– Sustainable innovation ecosystems grounded in patient trust
Rare disease science is advancing rapidly. The responsibility now is to ensure collaboration, inclusion, and technological innovation advance at the same pace.
That is the commitment behind #RDDIndoUSrare.
Harsha Rajasimha
Indo US Organization for Rare Diseases
+1 540-239-0465
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