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Grant - Summer 2018 - ALS – Christopher McDermott, MBChB, FRCP, PhD

“There have been conflicting studies with regards to whether diaphragm pacing is a good thing to offer people living with ALS to support their breathing. This study is about making sure patients do not receive an intervention that may potentially do more harm than good.”
Christopher McDermott, professor of Translational Neurology at the University of Sheffield in England, was awarded a research grant totaling $60,000 over 9 months to create a task force to provide unbiased analysis of diaphragm-pacing studies in ALS. This grant is co-funded by MDA, the ALS Association, and the Motor Neuron Disease Association UK.
Weakness of the breathing muscles is a common feature of ALS, causing poor quality of life, breathlessness, recurrent chest infections, and eventually death. The most effective treatment currently for ALS-related breathing issues is a non-invasive ventilator (NIV) that people with ALS use to support their breathing. However NIV can be difficult for individuals to use, and even in those who use NIV, muscle weakness progresses and eventually NIV cannot compensate. There is therefore a need for additional and alternative options for treating breathing problems in ALS. Diaphragmatic pacing (DP) offers such a possibility. A pivotal study in the US demonstrated a survival advantage in people with ALS using DP. The FDA approved DP on humanitarian grounds. The pivotal study compared survival of people with ALS using pacing with historical data rather than having a contemporaneous control group. The results from subsequent UK and French studies demonstrated harm in the groups receiving DP compared to contemporaneous control people with ALS not receiving DP (people with ALS who received DP had shortened survival). The aim of this project is to assemble a task force to oversee an independent analysis of all the available data on DP in people with ALS to understand the differing results and explore if there are potentially people with ALS who may benefit from DP.
Grantee: ALS – Christopher McDermott, MBChB, FRCP, PhD
Grant type: Research Grant
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