Last month, Deep Genomics garnered headlines when it declared that it had nominated the industry’s first artificial intelligence-discovered therapeutic candidate. The experimental therapy is intended to treat Wilson disease, a rare and potentially life-threatening condition. The target for the therapy was also identified by the company’s AI platform and Deep Genomics said it was able to identify the target and drug candidate in less than 18 months. We spoke to Brendan Frey, founder and CEO of De...
Oct 09, 2019•28 min
Shane Burcaw and Hannah Aylward, known to YouTube viewers as Squirmy and Grubs, often find people have trouble comprehending their relationship. Burcaw, who is disabled as a result of spinal muscular atrophy, weighs just 65 pounds and has limited physical abilities. As the title of his latest book explains, “Strangers Assume My Girlfriend Is My Nurse.” We spoke to Burcaw and Aylward about their relationship, their encounters with others, and their efforts to shatter misconceptions about the abil...
Oct 03, 2019•26 min
Jeremy Levin’s high-profile success at building the pipeline at Bristol-Myers Squibb through deal-making and driving the company into immunotherapies, has given him the ability to take virtually any job he’d like in the biopharmaceutical sector. Given that, it may seem surprising the Big Pharma executive chose to become CEO of a development-stage company focused on rare neurological conditions. We spoke to Levin, CEO of Ovid Therapeutics, about why he took the job, the conditions the company is ...
Sep 25, 2019•39 min
Jennifer and Tracy VanHoutan lost two children in less than two years to CLN2 Batten disease, a rare, genetic, neurodegenerative condition that slowly robs children of their abilities before taking their lives. The VanHoutans founded Noah’s Hope to create awareness, raise money to fund research, and eliminate policy barriers to bringing therapies to patients. Despite their loss, they continue to advocate and push for treatments. At this year’s Global Genes Rare Patient Advocacy Summit in San Die...
Sep 18, 2019•20 min
When David Fajgenbaum was in medical school, he became stricken with a rare autoimmune disease that nearly killed him. Though he recovered, he would suffer recurring, life-threatening flares only to discover the poor state of research into condition. Fajgenbaum chronicles his rare disease journey and his efforts to drive research and find treatments in his new book “Chasing My Cure: A Doctor’s Race to Turn Hope into Action.” Fajgenbaum, who is executive director of the Castleman Disease Collabor...
Sep 11, 2019•27 min
Journalist and best-selling author Susannah Cahalan, ahead of her keynote address at the Global Genes’ RARE Patient Advocacy Summit September 18 in San Diego, discusses about her diagnostic odyssey, the critical role the support of her loved ones made, and what allowed the doctor who diagnosed and treated her to succeed where others had failed.
Sep 04, 2019•25 min
Nancy Patterson was diagnosed 32 years ago with Graves’ disease, a rare autoimmune condition that causes the thyroid to become overactive and can lead to a range of health complications. Patterson, a practicing mental health counselor, founded the Graves’ Disease and Thyroid Foundation, which she led for nearly 20 years. In her counseling role, she has worked with patients and families across the country and has been a proponent of the important role support groups can play in healing and educat...
Aug 29, 2019•28 min
Epigenetics is the study of the regulatory system that controls how genes are turned on or off. In certain cancers, the proteins that regulate gene expression become dysregulated and incorrectly activate or deactivate genes, which can lead to cancer. Salarius Pharmaceuticals is targeting the epigenetic causes of cancer, including rare pediatric cancers. We spoke to David Arthur, CEO of Salarius about epigenetics, the rare cancer Ewing sarcoma, and company’s lead drug candidate to treat the condi...
Aug 21, 2019•21 min
Pediatric and primary hyperoxaluria is a rare genetic condition that causes over absorption of oxalate, a compound found in many foods. Too much oxalate can lead to the formation of kidney stones and cause progressive damage of the kidneys. Allena Pharmaceuticals is developing an oral enzyme to treat both the rare form of hyperoxaluria and a more common form of the condition. We spoke to Louis Brenner, CEO of Allena, about the company’s experimental therapy to treat hyperoxaluria, it’s platform ...
Aug 14, 2019•22 min
Casimir Trials is a contract research organization that is seeking to bring patient and caregiver perspective into the clinical trials process. It’s working with drug developers to create endpoints and measures that can provide rigorous and quantifiable means of demonstrating whether an experimental therapy provides meaningful improvements to a patient’s quality of life. We spoke to Christine McSherry, co-founder and CEO of Casimir Trials, about the challenges of developing patient-centric outco...
Aug 08, 2019•36 min
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a serious, life-limiting lung disease characterized by fibrosis and scarring of lung tissue. Patients generally live only about three to five years after a diagnosis. Approved therapies can slow down the progression of the disease, but no available therapies halt or reverse it. The only curative therapy is a lung transplant, an option that is available to only a small subset of patients. Promedior is developing an experimental therapy it believes may not only hal...
Jul 31, 2019•21 min
Patients with rare diseases often have a complex constellation of symptoms that require the care of multiple specialists. Getting access to the needed mix of physicians and counselors can represent geographic and scheduling challenges for patients and caregivers and create difficulties in coordinating care between specialists. One approach to addressing these needs has been the development of centers of excellence that can provide comprehensive and coordinated care for patients with experts in t...
Jul 24, 2019•26 min
Mitochondria are the powerhouses of the cell and play a central role in a number of rare diseases. Mitochondria have their own DNA and Minovia Therapeutics is seeking to develop cell therapies designed to repair damaged mitochondrial DNA using autologous stem cells that have been enriched with blood-derived mitochondria. We spoke to Natalie Yivgi Ohana, co-founder and CEO of Minovia, about the company’s mitochondria augmentation therapy, how it works, and why it may point the way for treating mo...
Jul 17, 2019•17 min
Earlier this year Passage Bio announced its launch with $115.5 million in funding and a group of founders with a strong pedigree. The company’s founders include gene therapy pioneer James Wilson, pharmaceutical industry veteran Tachi Yamada, and former Alexion executive and OrbiMed Venture Partner Stephen Squinto. One point of distinction for the company is its unique partnership with the University of Pennsylvania and its Gene Therapy Program, which gives it access to technology developed there...
Jul 10, 2019•31 min
AGTC is developing gene therapies to treat patients with rare inherited eye conditions. It has multiple programs it is advancing to restore visual function in patients with diseases that threaten to leave them blind. One issue that has emerged, though, is finding the right measures and endpoint for its clinical studies and getting the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to recognize the traditional endpoints and measures used for eye diseases may not be well suited for all of these conditions. We ...
Jul 03, 2019•24 min
Avidity Biosciences is pioneering antibody oligonucleotide, a new class of therapeutics that marry the target selectivity of monoclonal antibodies with the precision of genetic medicine. The company is focusing on treatments for rare muscle disorders including myotonic dystrophy type 1 and Duchenne muscular dystrophy. We spoke to Art Levin, executive vice president of research and development at Avidity Biosciences, about the company’s therapeutic approach, why it’s focusing on rare muscle disor...
Jun 26, 2019•21 min
Global Genes Rare University is rolling out a new online course aimed at helping rare disease patients and families understand the world of genetics. The course, which is free, starts with the basic genetic concepts for rare disease, and them moves to family and heredity, genetic testing, and scientific advances. We spoke to Holly Snyder, a lead editor on the Rare University genetics course and senior genetic counselor at Illumina, about what rare disease patients and their families should under...
Jun 19, 2019•26 min
For rare disease patient groups seeking to drive research toward the development of therapies, many obstacles exist. By setting an overarching research agenda, driving collaborations among researchers, and sharing what is learned, patient groups are getting the most out of limited budgets and accelerating the time it takes to develop new treatments. The newly announced Rare As One Project from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative seeks to help rare disease patient organizations apply the collaborative...
Jun 12, 2019•26 min
Wendy Chung and her lab have proven a talent for identifying new rare diseases. She and her team have discovered more than 44 genetic conditions to date. But Chung, a professor of pediatrics and medicine at Columbia University and New York-Presbyterian Hospital, and director of the clinical genetics program at Columbia University, is driving beyond discovery to help patients find therapeutic alternatives for these conditions at Columbia University’s Center for Rare Pediatric Genetic Diseases. We...
Jun 05, 2019•22 min
The emotional impact a rare disease can have on siblings of children with these conditions can be significant. A sibling voices survey evaluating the psychological effects of growing up with a sibling with severe epileptic encephalopathies presented at the European Congress on Epileptology last year suggests these children may be as risk for anxiety or depression. We spoke to Lauren Schwartz, a psychologist at the Rehabilitation Medicine Clinic at UW Medical Center, about the study, what it foun...
May 29, 2019•18 min
Early diagnosis and intervention can improve outcomes for children with autism spectrum disorder but arriving at a diagnosis can be difficult at an early age. To diagnose the condition, doctors have relied on behavioral tests and the average age of diagnosis in the United States is more than 4 years. NeuroPointDX has developed a diagnostic test that looks at metabolic imbalances in the blood that can diagnose a child with the condition as young as 18 months. We spoke to Elizabeth Donley, CEO of ...
May 22, 2019•24 min
Natural history studies track the course of a disease over time, helping researchers understand the different ways a condition may manifest itself and progress. These studies can also provide insight into whether patient populations should be divided into subtypes for more targeted therapeutic approaches. Such data often represents a foundational understanding of a disease that can play an essential role in the design of clinical trials, helping investigators determine appropriate protocols and ...
May 15, 2019•28 min
When Lara Pullen’s son was diagnosed with Prader-Willi syndrome, she began to dive into the scientific literature about the rare condition. Pullen, a scientist and co-founder of the Chion Foundation, discovered that pitolisant, a recently approved drug for narcolepsy, might benefit patients with Prader-Willi. Working with her Chion co-founder Maria Picone, who developed an online data-gathering platform for patient-reported outcomes, they tracked the effects of the drug in three patients. In a c...
May 08, 2019•28 min
One reason for the extended diagnostic odyssey that rare disease patients face is that doctors are often unfamiliar with the rare conditions they may have. In addition, doctors are trained to think of the likeliest explanation for a patient’s symptoms, which may be similar to those of more common diseases. London-based Mendelian is working to bring machine learning to the rare disease diagnostic process as a way to identify patients whose symptoms may suggest they have an underlying rare genetic...
May 01, 2019•22 min
Children awaiting adoption with a rare disease may go untreated or receive minimal treatment. If they go unplaced, they may face life in a long-term care facility, or nursing home. Gift of Adoption is a nonprofit that provides adoption assistance grants to help vulnerable children find a permanent home and the chance to thrive. We spoke to Pam Devereux, CEO of Gift of Adoption, about the cost of adoption, how her organization works, and the need it is seeking to address.
Apr 24, 2019•23 min
April 29 is Undiagnosed Rare Disease Day. It is a day when advocates raise awareness among the general public and policy makers about the emotional, physical, and financial impact living with an undiagnosed rare disease has on patients and their families. Ahead of this year’s Undiagnosed Rare Disease Day we spoke with Ava Szajnuk, an 11-year-old undiagnosed rare disease patient and advocate, about how her condition impacts her daily life, and the work she’s done as an advocate.
Apr 17, 2019•18 min
The Foundation for Angelman Syndrome Therapeutics Australia says it has created a Global Angelman Syndrome Registry that gives parents and caregivers the power to drive the collection of data. Its goal is to make the registry the largest collection of information about the neurological disorder to date and use it to inform the research for new therapies by providing insights into the developmental progress, medication, and seizure management related to the condition. One unique aspect of the reg...
Apr 10, 2019•21 min
Rett syndrome is a genetic disorder that mostly affect girls and is often misdiagnosed as autism, cerebral palsy, or non-specific developmental delay. A study recently published in the journal Neurology reports encouraging results from a mid-stage clinical trial for an experimental therapy to treat the condition. The patient organization Rettsyndrome.org played a key role in identifying the potential application for the drug in Rett syndrome and provided early funding. We spoke to Steve Kaminsky...
Apr 03, 2019•34 min
Sickle cell disease is the most common inherited blood disorder in the United States. People with the condition have sickle-shaped red blood cells and these misshaped cells can block the flow of blood and oxygen to organs throughout the body. These blockages can cause severe pain, organ damage, and strokes. While the disease is well understood, treatment options today are limited and obtaining proper care can be complicated by healthcare workers' lack of understanding of the disease, racism, and...
Mar 27, 2019•38 min
A number of rare, genetic diseases including Huntington’s disease and myotonic dystrophy belong to a group of conditions known as repeat expansion disorders. Though it's normal to have pieces of repeating genetic code, these diseases involve an abnormally high number of repeats that result in the production of toxic proteins. NeuBase Therapeutics is using its platform technology to produce antisense drugs that it believes have distinct advantages over existing antisense drugs today. NeuBase rece...
Mar 21, 2019•26 min