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URGENT ACTION REQUESTED: RALPH HALL (R-TX-4th)

Posted on September 8, 2010 in SMA Treatment Acceleration Act


Attention to families living in Congressman Ralph Hall’s district (Texas’ 4th district): we need your help, and as soon as possible.

If you or someone you know lives in Congressman Hall’s district, please contact Caroline Gibson immediately: carolinegibson@fightsma.com or 804-515-0080. We need Mr. Hall to reach out to other Republicans on committee in support of the SMA Treatment Acceleration Act. This is an important and urgent request!

Thank you in advance for your help. We are nearing the finish line!

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Has Your Family Had a District Visit?


SMA families and friends across the country have been hard at work during August recess on behalf of the SMA Treatment Acceleration Act (HR 2149, S 1158). Members of Congress have heard from YOU how important this legislation is, via emails, phone calls, letters, and district visits.

Did your family meet with your Congressman during August recess? We want to hear from you! Please send us recaps and pictures from meetings with your Member of Congress.

Keep up all your hard work. We’ve made great strides this Congress and will continue to work hard until we see this bill become law. Continue to follow-up with your Congressman or Senators’ offices as we turn the final corner for our bill.

Questions? Feel free to call or email Caroline Gibson, Public Affairs Coordinator, at anytime: carolinegibson@fightsma.com, 804-515-0080.

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GSF’s Fundraising Campaign for Gene Therapy Research Reaches Milestone


This summer, FightSMA and the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation (GSF) partnered in an effort to raise funding for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) gene therapy research.

GSF’s goal is to raise $200,000 before the end of 2010. Today, they announced that they have reached the halfway mark.

From GSF:

GSF $200 for SMA badgeLess than TWO months after launching our “$200K For SMA” fundraising campaign in support of promising SMA focused gene therapy research at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and The Ohio State University, friends, families, colleagues, coworkers, communities, and total strangers across the country - some impacted by SMA and many not - have come together to organize and execute an impressive laundry list of wonderful fundraisers totaling over - DRUM ROLL PLEASE - One Hundred Thousand Dollars. That’s right. $100,000!!! In…just…TWO…months.

There’s just no other way to say it - what’s happening here is incredible, inspiring, and humbling. And we are personally honored to be part of all of this positivity - it fuels us to push forward and do more. At our core, we’ve always believed in the power of the individual. And as individuals, if we collectively work together in a positive, productive fashion, we can have an enormous impact and change the status quo.

Click here to read the full announcement.

A huge “THANK YOU!” goes out to everyone who has been involved in raising funds for GSF’s “$200K for SMA” (read the list here) and FightSMA’s “Realizing the Dream” - campaigns worked together towards the same goal: to bring SMA gene therapy to clinical trial.

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Article addresses the difficulties of developing new therapies

Posted on August 26, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research


The web magazine, Slate, has a thought-provoking article entitled “The Medical Revolution: Where are the cures promised by stem cells, gene therapy, and the human genome?” which addresses the difficulties of developing new therapies.

To read the article, click here.

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Possible funding opportunities for SMA researchers

Posted on August 24, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research


The following are three National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding opportunities that may be of interest to researchers working toward a treatment and cure for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a deadly crippler and the number-one inherited genetic cause of infant death.

Exceptional, Unconventional Research Enabling Knowledge Acceleration (EUREKA) (R01)
Application Due Date: October 21, 2010
Solicits proposals for exceptionally innovative research on novel hypotheses or difficult problems, solutions to which would have an extremely high impact on biomedical or biobehavioral research. Support may be requested for up to $800,000 in direct costs (excluding consortium F&A) over a four-year period, not exceeding $250,000 (direct costs, excluding consortium F&A) in any one year. (Note, that over the last three years the EUREKA mechanism has had a success rate much more in line with standard R01 applications. Each of these offers an opportunity not as easily addressed in regular NIH funding mechanisms.)

NIH Common Fund Transformative Research Projects Program (R01)
Application Due Date(s): October 27, 2010
Solicits applications proposing groundbreaking, exceptionally innovative, high risk, original and/or unconventional research with the potential to create new scientific paradigms or challenge existing ones. Budget requests should be commensurate with project needs for up to a five-year project period. Up to one third of the budget for this FOA will be reserved projects exceeding $1 million dollars in direct costs.

Scalable Assays for Unbiased Analysis of Neurobiological Function (R01)
Application Due Date: November 17, 2010
Solicits applications to develop novel, robust analytical platforms using in vitro assays to reveal changes in neuronal and/or glial function. The goal is to adapt state-of-the-art measures of basic cellular processes or molecular events that are key mediators of brain function with the intent to probe mechanisms and/or perturbations in an unbiased and efficient manner. The novel assay platforms would provide opportunities to measure neurobiological endpoints and build a pipeline to be used in the context of target identification and drug discovery.

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SMA to be represented at the 2010 SfN meeting

Posted on August 23, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research


The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) is the world’s largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to advancing understanding of the brain and nervous system. SfN’s 40th annual meeting, Neuroscience 2010, will be held November 13-17 in San Diego, California. As in past years, the exhibit hall will have an “SMA Organizations” booth devoted to raising awareness of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) among the researchers and scientists attending the meeting.

In addition, Families of SMA, FightSMA, MDA, and SMA Foundation will be sponsoring a satellite event. Entitled “Nucleic Acids to the Rescue: Gene and Antisense Oligonucleotide Therapies for SMA,” the symposia meeting will be held Monday, November 15th at the Manchester Grand Hyatt, just a block from the SfN meeting site. (This event is not sponsored by the Society for Neuroscience.)

Click on the image below to view the save the date.

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More studies show concern about cardiac defects in SMA patients

Posted on August 19, 2010 in General Information


Work in the Lorson lab at the University of Missouri, the DiDonato lab at Northwestern University, and the Kaspar lab at Nationwide Children’s Hospital have recently shown functional and developmental cardiac defects in two severe models of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). The studies were conducted with mouse models, not SMA patients, and all three were recently published in the journal Human Molecular Genetics.

According to Dr. Chris Lorson, FightSMA’s Science Director and also an author of one of the studies, “collectively these results highlight the importance of additional tissues in SMA that may contribute to the overall pathology in SMA - most likely in more severe cases. This is especially important when developing and testing potential therapeutics in SMA models and as novel compounds progress towards the clinic.”

Click the links below to read the article abstracts:

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Family has difficult path to SMA diagnosis

Posted on August 18, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends


Zion HoskinsEven though spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the number one genetic killer of children under the age of two and is estimated to occur in 1 in 6000 births, all too often parents tell of a long and stressful path to their child’s SMA diagnosis. Many times this is simply due to a physicians inexperience with SMA and so the signs of the disease are not immediately recognized. But, the story of the Hoskins family of Greencastle, Indiana seems particularly burdensome. It involves ignored symptoms, lost medical tests, a misdiagnosis, and months of unnecessary intravenous treatment.

Thankfully, Zion Hoskins, just short of his second birthday, is doing well. His mom, Chelsea said, “It’s hard to watch him struggle. He’ll fall over, but he gets back up and keeps trying.” Even though Zion’s parents know that the future will likely include feeding tubes, breathing machines, and wheelchairs, they are optimistic that their son will have the opportunity to enjoy many of the same experiences as his peers. “It’ll be interesting to see how things progress,” Paul, Zion’s father, said. “I like to think Zion is going to prove all the doctors wrong.”

Read their story by clicking here.

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$600K Awarded for Gene Therapy Study

Posted on August 16, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Science and Research


“We are very encouraged by the ability of gene delivered follistatin to increase muscle mass and strength along with a relatively clean safety profile in our studies to date,” say Drs. Jerry Mendell and Brian Kaspar of The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. “While the first trials of follistatin are planned for Becker Muscular Dystrophy and Inclusion Body Mysositis, if proven safe and efficacious, Spinal Muscular Atrophy patients may also benefit from this treatment.” Work in the Kaspar Laboratory is currently testing gene delivered Follistatin in various SMA models.

From Nationwide Children’s Hospital:

Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy Awards $600K to Nationwide Children’s Hospital for Gene Therapy Study

Dr. Jerry Mendell Leading Follistatin Gene Therapy

Nationwide Children's Hospital logoColumbus, OH - 8/10/2010

Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), the largest non-profit organization in the United States focused on finding a cure for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (Duchenne), announced that PPMD will award a $600,000 grant to Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio to conduct clinical testing of a promising gene therapy technique for muscle disease.

Investigators, led by Jerry Mendell, M.D., director of the Center for Gene Therapy in The Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital with co-investigator Brian Kaspar, Ph.D, will inject a modified virus (vector) carrying the gene for the muscle growth-stimulating protein follistatin into the quadriceps muscles of volunteers with Becker muscular dystrophy and sporadic inclusion body myositis. The goal of the study is to verify that the procedure is safe and to document any increase in quadriceps muscle size and function. People with these diseases have overall muscle weakness but with particular weakness of the quadriceps muscle, which is important for standing and sitting. Preliminary studies in mice with muscular dystrophy and in non-human primates demonstrated that follistatin delivered in this manner can cause significant increases in the size of injected muscles. Improvements in the strength of the mice and non-human primates were documented.

PPMD funding for the project will cover the costs of manufacturing the clinical grade viral vectors, and the costs associated with the clinical testing. If the initial study is successful, the investigators will expand the research to a phase II study and will also make plans to test it in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and other muscle diseases. The first clinical studies are planned to start in early 2011.

“This is the first time a gene therapy approach has been used to supply genes that generically stimulate muscle growth rather than directly replacing missing muscle proteins,” explains Sharon Hesterlee, Ph.D., PPMD Senior Director of Research and Advocacy, “Other applications could include the treatment of muscles that have been injured directly through accidents or indirectly through disuse.”

To read the rest of the announcement, click here.

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SMA Families: Share Your Stories!

Posted on August 13, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends


Christopher FinlanChristopher Finlan, the author who used his debut novel “Not a Fire Exit” to raise funds and awareness of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), is preparing a new project focused on families affected by the disease. With the support of Milverstead Publishing, he is asking families to share their personal stories and experiences with SMA to create a paperback book “for people to read for generations to come.” In addition, profits from sale of the book will be distributed to SMA organizations.

Click here to learn all the details of how to get involved.

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