Showing posts with label hempels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hempels. Show all posts
April 28, 2011
Rare Diseases: Will push for new drugs pay off?
Cassidy Hempel, 6, waves at hospital staff with the help of her mother, Chris, at the Children's Hospital and Research Center in Oakland, Calif., Friday, March 18, 2011. Cassidy and twin sister, Addison, are being treated for a fatal disorder called Niemann Pick Type C disease. (Credit: AP Photo)
(CBS/AP)Call it the rare disease gap. Scientists have identified more than 7,000 diseases that affect fewer than 200,000 people, but treatments are available for just 200 of the diseases.
But now there's a move to close the gap. The National Institutes of Health this fall will open a center to speed genetic discoveries into usable therapies, doing some of the riskiest early-stage research in hopes companies then will step in.
A new International Rare Diseases Research Consortium is pushing for at least 200 more treatments by 2020, in part by pooling the work of far-flung scientists and families.
Rather than starting from scratch, the FDA is pointing the way for manufacturers to "repurpose" old drugs for new use against rare diseases, publishing a list of those deemed particularly promising.
And legislation recently introduced in the Senate, called the Creating Hope Act, would offer drug makers another financial incentive - a voucher promising fast FDA evaluation of their next blockbuster drug in return for developing a therapy for a rare or neglected disease that disproportionately affects children.
"We have to give drug companies a reason to go into this market," says Nancy Goodman of Kids v Cancer, a group pushing the legislation. Her son Jacob died at age 10 from a type of brain cancer that has no good treatment.
Pharmaceutical giants are starting to show some new interest in rare diseases, traditionally a niche market for small biotech companies. The practical reason: Blockbusters are drying up, says Dr. Ed Mascioli of Pfizer Inc., the world's largest drug company.
Some other companies, including Novartis AG and GlaxoSmithKline PLC, also have begun rare-disease programs.
But NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins says all the activity reflects a larger promise. "Getting a home run with a rare disease sometimes points you in a direction that will be beneficial for common diseases," he told The Associated Press.
That's the argument put forth by Chris Hempel, of Reno, Nev. Her 7-year-twin girls have been getting injections of an experimental drug for Niemann-Pick Type C (HPC), a disease that causes cholesterol and other fats to build up inside cells, harming the brain and other organs until patients lose the ability to talk, walk and swallow. Only 500 children worldwide are known to have it. But a drug that could flush out that build-up, Hempel contends, just might point to a new route to fighting heart disease or Alzheimer's.
Hempel isn't alone in her quest to repurpose common drugs. Consider progeria, a disease that rapidly ages children until they die of a heart attack or stroke, usually before their teens.
Collins' lab at NIH uncovered the gene defect behind progeria, research that he says he pursued only because of meeting another mom, Dr. Leslie Gordon, founder of the Progeria Research Foundation, and her son, Sam, who has the disease. Today, clinical trials are under way using a failed cancer drug named lonafarnib that promises to block some of the progeria mutation's effect.
There are an estimated 150 progeria patients worldwide, but Gordon points to growing evidence that the culprit protein may play a role in the heart disease that comes with regular aging, too.
** Taken from CBS News Health Watch **
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January 12, 2011
3rd Annual World Rare Disease Day
Chris Hempel is very active in searching for a cure for Niemann Pick Type C (NPC) and other rare diseases. Chris has twin daughters, Addi and Cassi, who have NPC. She has huddled many obstacles over the past couple of years. Chris and Hugh along with other families, like the Hadleys, and a team of reachers started SOAR (Support of Accelerated Research). She and her husband are working very hard for all the NPC families and I thank them for that. NPC research continues to move forward and with parents like Chris and Hugh there is no way but UP.
By: Chris Hempel
"The National Institutes of Health (NIH) will celebrate the 3rd World Rare Disease Day on February 28, 2011, with a day-long celebration and recognition of the various rare diseases research activities. The event will be held in the Lipsett Amphitheater from 8:30am to 5:15pm. Dr. Francis Collins is expected to speak. A tentative agenda has been posted.
In association with the Global Genes Project, the NIH Office of Rare Diseases Research is encouraging all attendees to wear their favorite pair of jeans to the event to support the Global Genes Project awareness campaign. The Global Genes Project awareness campaign is designed around a denim blue jeans theme and a blue denim ribbon which has become the unifying symbol of hope for the rare disease community worldwide. Check out our kid volunteers who make ribbons!
Denim blue ribbons will be distributed at the event and the Global Genes Project will be bringing some of the 7000 Bracelets of Hope which have also been made by volunteers around the world to represent the 7000 rare diseases that afflict an estimated 250 million people globally.
Supporters from the NIH Clinical Center, the NIH Institutes and Centers, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the Food & Drug Administration’s Office of Orphan Product Development (OOPD), the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD), and the Genetic Alliance will also be at the event.
Attendance is free and open to the public. Unfortunately, I will not be able to attend as Pfizer is holding a World Rare Disease Day 2011 event the same day and I have been invited to speak along with other rare disease advocates."
By: Chris Hempel
"The National Institutes of Health (NIH) will celebrate the 3rd World Rare Disease Day on February 28, 2011, with a day-long celebration and recognition of the various rare diseases research activities. The event will be held in the Lipsett Amphitheater from 8:30am to 5:15pm. Dr. Francis Collins is expected to speak. A tentative agenda has been posted.
In association with the Global Genes Project, the NIH Office of Rare Diseases Research is encouraging all attendees to wear their favorite pair of jeans to the event to support the Global Genes Project awareness campaign. The Global Genes Project awareness campaign is designed around a denim blue jeans theme and a blue denim ribbon which has become the unifying symbol of hope for the rare disease community worldwide. Check out our kid volunteers who make ribbons!
Denim blue ribbons will be distributed at the event and the Global Genes Project will be bringing some of the 7000 Bracelets of Hope which have also been made by volunteers around the world to represent the 7000 rare diseases that afflict an estimated 250 million people globally.
Supporters from the NIH Clinical Center, the NIH Institutes and Centers, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the Food & Drug Administration’s Office of Orphan Product Development (OOPD), the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD), and the Genetic Alliance will also be at the event.
Attendance is free and open to the public. Unfortunately, I will not be able to attend as Pfizer is holding a World Rare Disease Day 2011 event the same day and I have been invited to speak along with other rare disease advocates."
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