Professor Marina Kennerson who directs the team at the Northcott Neuroscience Laboratory, ANZAC Research Institute in Sydney Australia is one of the lead researchers awarded a $3 million grant from the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Genomics Health Futures...
CMT Research Foundation Targets CMT1X in Partnership with University of Illinois Chicago
The CMT Research Foundation is partnering with the University of Illinois Chicago to test a potential therapeutic for CMT1X, the second most common form of CMT, behind only CMT1A in prevalence. CMT is one of the most common inherited neurological disorders, affecting...
CMT Research Foundation To Host First Global Research Convention
Several Hundred Charcot-Marie-Tooth* World Leaders Gather to Accelerate Collaboration and Advancements in Research; Pharma Partner DTx to Review Significant Progress in Drug Delivery Gene Therapy Innovator and Pioneer Dr. James M. Wilson to Keynote ATLANTA (June...
Promising Research Results Point to Potential Cures for Two Most Common Forms of CMT
Momentum is building in the development of gene therapies for Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. Landmark back-to-back research publications offer innovative approaches to potentially curing the two most common forms of CMT. Here is what the findings showed and what they mean for CMT patients and families.
Turning $128,000 into Millions to Deliver a Treatment for CMT
If you’ve ever been frustrated by the slow pace of research progress or questioned how a single donation makes a difference, the collaboration between the CMT Research Foundation and DTx Pharma proves that one simple action, one bold move and one donation is all it...
Additional Funding Announced for Promising Gene Silencing Approach to Treat CMT1A
After demonstrating tremendous progress, the CMT Research Foundation’s Scientific Advisory Board has decided to extend funding for a research project led by Dr. Kleopas Kleopa for six more months. If successful, this project could lead to the first genetic therapy for CMT1A. Read more.
CMT Research Foundation Launches Groundbreaking Research to Overcome Barriers to Delivering CMT Therapies to the Peripheral Nervous System
The CMT Research Foundation has launched a groundbreaking new research collaboration today with James Dahlman, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory School of Medicine. This innovative partnership seeks to overcome the challenges in CMT drug delivery by using lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) to deliver therapies to the PNS that could slow, stop or even reverse the effects of CMT in patients.
What to Expect in CMT Research During 2021: 5 Questions with Chief Scientific Officer Keith Fargo
What progress can patients and families expect to see in CMT research during 2021? What is the most promising research on the horizon? The CMT Research Foundation’s Chief Scientific Officer Keith Fargo, Ph.D., sat down with us to answer your most pressing questions about CMT research in the year ahead.
How to Measure Progress in CMT Research: 8 Signs Research is Working
It costs more than $2.6 billion to develop an approved prescription medicine and typically takes between 10 to 15 years to get a drug to clinical trials. With no treatments or cures currently available for diseases like CMT, it’s easy to question how donations to support scientific research make a difference. These 8 signs let you know when research is working.
More Than Hope: An Action Plan to End CMT
As we approach the end of 2020 and look ahead to a new year, it’s natural to feel hopeful about what the future may hold — hope for an end to the global pandemic; hope for happiness and good health for our families; and hope for an end to Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT). The CMT Research Foundation shares these hopes, but we know delivering treatments and cures for CMT quickly requires more than hope. It requires vision, commitment, wisdom, a strong plan, and most importantly — action.
See a preview of the CMT Research Foundation’s 2021 action plan.