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How to access Skyclarys from the UAE — the named-patient import pathway, 2026

By Reserve Meds · Clinical & regulatory team · Last reviewed 2026-04-23

A UAE patient with a confirmed diagnosis of Friedreich's ataxia may receive a prescription for Skyclarys (omaveloxolone) from their treating neurologist. Skyclarys is FDA-approved as the first disease-specific therapy for Friedreich's ataxia, developed by Biogen (following Reata Pharmaceuticals). Friedreich's ataxia is a progressive neurodegenerative condition driven by GAA repeat expansion in the FXN gene, affecting coordination, cardiac function, and (in some patients) glycaemic control. In the UAE, Skyclarys is not locally registered, which is why your neurologist is likely guiding you toward the Ministry of Health and Prevention (MoHAP) named-patient import pathway.

This guide explains the legal pathway, what documentation your physician needs, typical timing and cost bands, and where Reserve Meds fits in.

The clinical situation

Skyclarys is an oral Nrf2 activator taken once daily, dosed in the standard adult regimen with dose adjustment for hepatic-function status. Eligibility is based on genetic confirmation of Friedreich's ataxia (biallelic GAA expansion in FXN) and ongoing management by a neurologist familiar with ataxia and the associated cardiomyopathy surveillance. Your neurologist will confirm diagnosis, run baseline liver function tests, review lipid panels, and coordinate cardiology input. Because Skyclarys is oral, in-country administration is straightforward once the prescribing plan is in place.

Is Skyclarys legally importable into the UAE?

Yes — through the MoHAP named-patient import framework. Parallel authority operates in Abu Dhabi through the Department of Health (DoH) and in Dubai through the Dubai Health Authority (DHA), depending on where the prescribing facility is located.

The named-patient mechanism allows a UAE-licensed physician to import a medicine not locally registered when: (a) the medicine is approved by a recognised reference authority such as the US FDA, (b) no clinically equivalent locally registered alternative is available, (c) the physician takes clinical responsibility, and (d) chain of custody is documented end to end. For Friedreich's ataxia, there is no locally registered disease-specific alternative, making the clinical rationale direct.

How the pathway works, step by step

  1. Consultation with your treating neurologist. Genetic confirmation of Friedreich's ataxia (biallelic GAA expansion), baseline neurological status (mFARS or equivalent), cardiac assessment, and liver function tests documented.
  2. Baseline laboratory panel. Liver function, lipid panel, BNP, and glycaemic status established.
  3. MoHAP named-patient application. Your physician or hospital pharmacy files the application with clinical rationale, genetic report, patient reference, and chain-of-custody plan.
  4. US-side sourcing. Reserve Meds coordinates with our US-licensed specialty wholesale partner to secure Skyclarys from authorised distribution.
  5. Shipment. Skyclarys ships with chain-of-custody documentation to the prescribing hospital pharmacy.
  6. Arrival and dispensing. The hospital pharmacy releases the bottle to the patient with dosing instructions; neurology and cardiology monitoring are scheduled.

What documentation your physician needs

Your physician will typically need to provide:

  • A clinical rationale letter confirming Friedreich's ataxia diagnosis, genetic report, baseline mFARS / cardiac status, and Skyclarys as the indicated treatment
  • Verification of their UAE medical licence
  • A copy of the FXN genetic diagnostic report
  • Patient identifier (anonymised reference where possible)
  • An administration and monitoring plan including liver function, lipid, and cardiac surveillance

Reserve Meds provides a physician documentation kit that bundles the templates MoHAP (or DoH/DHA) reviewers expect to see for rare-neurology named-patient imports, including the liver-function and cardiac-surveillance plan central to Skyclarys long-term use.

Costs and timing

Skyclarys's US cash-pay annual cost sits in an indicative 2026 range of roughly USD 370,000–400,000. International logistics, MoHAP documentation handling, and concierge coordination add incremental cost. Reserve Meds issues a full transparent quote at the start of intake.

Indicative timing — not guaranteed — for first dispense after cohort intake opens is approximately 14–28 days from the moment a complete MoHAP application is submitted. Refills ship on a rolling basis against the monthly dispensing schedule.

Reserve Meds is in pre-launch. Fulfilment availability is limited to our first cohort, and all timelines published on this site are indicative. If your clinical situation is time-sensitive, flag that when you join the waitlist — we triage accordingly.

A culturally-aware note: Friedreich's ataxia, like other autosomal-recessive conditions, clusters in UAE families with consanguineous ancestry. Families often learn of the diagnosis across multiple affected siblings, and extended-family decision-making is typical. Our concierge coordination is designed to include the family members a patient designates — a parent, spouse, or sibling acting as case contact for refills, clinic coordination, and cross-border travel planning.

Reserve Meds's role

Reserve Meds is a US-based concierge coordinator for cross-border specialty medicine. For Skyclarys specifically, we provide:

  • Sourcing. Through our US-licensed specialty wholesale partner, operating under DSCSA chain-of-custody.
  • Documentation. Regulatory package for your physician and for MoHAP (or DoH/DHA) review.
  • Logistics. Chain-of-custody shipment coordination to your prescribing hospital pharmacy.
  • Concierge case lead. A named point of contact for the patient and family, managing ongoing refill logistics.

What we do not do: we are not the prescriber, we do not practise medicine, and we are not the dispensing pharmacy. All clinical decisions remain with your treating neurologist and cardiology team. We operate on a waitlist basis during our pre-launch phase.

Frequently asked

Is this legal in the UAE? Yes, when executed through the MoHAP (or DoH/DHA) named-patient framework with appropriate documentation. Cross-border named-patient import for rare-disease therapies is a recognised mechanism. See our trust and compliance page.

Is Skyclarys a cure? No. Skyclarys is a disease-modifying therapy shown to slow deterioration on the mFARS scale in pivotal study data. Your neurologist will discuss realistic outcome expectations.

What monitoring is required? Liver function tests at baseline and periodically, lipid panel, BNP for cardiac surveillance, and weight/glycaemic surveillance are standard. Your neurology and cardiology teams set the cadence.

Can adolescents take Skyclarys? FDA labelling covers patients aged 16 years and older. Your neurologist will confirm age-based eligibility.

Will insurance cover this? Cash-pay is the default. Some UAE insurers consider rare-disease imports case by case; we supply documentation for your submission but do not process insurance claims directly.

Next step — join the first-cohort waitlist

Reserve Meds is opening to a limited first cohort in 2026. Add your case to the waitlist and our concierge case lead will reach out when we are ready to enter intake for Skyclarys coordination in the UAE.

Add me to the Skyclarys waitlist

Composite case examples. Reserve Meds is in pre-launch. This content is for general information and does not constitute medical advice.

Clinical & regulatory review: Reserve Meds clinical team and AI regulatory-counsel review pipeline. Last medically reviewed: 2026-04-23.

Composite-case & review disclosure. Composite case examples; no individual patient is depicted. Reserve Meds is in pre-launch - service availability is limited to our first cohort and published timelines are indicative. Content on this page is reviewed by Reserve Meds's clinical and regulatory team with AI-assisted pharmacist and regulatory-counsel review. A US-licensed pharmacist reviews every prescription before dispensing. Regulatory posture is informational, not legal advice; case-specific questions route to retained outside counsel. Review methodology ›
Last medically reviewed: . Reviewer: Reserve Meds clinical & regulatory team.