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Grant - Summer 2018 - ALS – Katharine Nicholson, MD

“By studying a population at risk for developing ALS, this project has the potential to further our understanding of underlying early disease mechanisms to allow for the development of novel therapeutics that target the earliest changes in ALS.”
Katharine Nicholson, instructor and assistant in Neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, was awarded an MDA Clinical Training Research Scholarship totaling $86,666 over 2 years to study early markers of disease in C9orf72 ALS. This grant is being co-funded by the American Brain Foundation and originated as part of a partnership with the ALS Association.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease affecting primarily the motor neurons and causing weakness. Familial ALS accounts for about 10% of all ALS and is most commonly caused by the C9orf72 (C9) repeat expansion. With advances in our understanding of genetically mediated ALS, there are many asymptomatic individuals in families known to harbor ALS genes who are motivated to participate in research.
The identification of early ALS could assist with better recognition, faster referral of possible cases, and more timely diagnosis for earlier treatment and improved outcomes for people with ALS. Delays in diagnosis postpone ALS patient access to multidisciplinary care, initiation of disease-modifying drugs, and participation in clinical trials. Researchers are unable to target people in the early stages the disease, impeding early enrollment in therapeutic trials before substantial neurodegeneration has occurred. Thus, uncovering the earliest biological and clinical changes in ALS has the potential to have an enormous impact on clinical care and dug development.
In this proposal, Dr. Nicholson and colleagues will leverage the Dominant Inherited ALS (DIALS) Network to conduct responsible genetic testing for asymptomatic people at risk of carrying the C9 gene and to study these volunteers over time to understand the biological events at play prior to the symptomatic horizon and at the time of symptom conversion. The overall goal of this project is to identify the earliest biological and clinical changes in C9-related ALS to ultimately promote early diagnosis, novel target identification for drug trials, and eventual pre-symptomatic treatment trials.
Grantee: ALS – Katharine Nicholson, MD
Grant type: Clinical Research Training Grant
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