Late last month, Congress passed a $1.3 trillion fiscal year 2018 Consolidated Appropriations spending bill that included a $3 billion increase to funding for medical research to the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Funding to the NIH has increased to $37 billion, the largest bump they have seen in years.
Researchers at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles, funded by The ALS Association with ALS Ice Bucket Challenge donations, are dedicated to finding unique avenues for treating ALS. Using animal models, they transplanted specially engineered neural cells into the motor cortex of the brain, the area responsible for muscle movement.
Lauren Sciences LLC, a private biotechnology company in New York, N.Y., recently received a third grant from The ALS Association to support the continued development of LAUR-301, Lauren Sciences’ novel V-Smart Nanomedicine designed specifically for ALS.
Today, we are happy to be joined by ALS clinician scientist Dr. Peter Creigh from the University of Rochester in Rochester, N.Y., the recipient of the 2018 Clinician Research Training Fellowship in ALS Research. The fellowship is given by The ALS Association, in partnership with the American Academy of Neurology (AAN).
The ALS Association is happy to continue our tradition of supporting bright, young scientists in ALS research through our Milton Safenowitz Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. These awards encourage young scientists to enter and, importantly, to remain in the ALS field.
The ALS Association is committed to helping improve clinical trial design, in order to increase trial efficiency that will more quickly lead to effective therapeutics. We awarded Dr. David Ennist and colleagues at Origent Data Sciences, Inc. two grants to support research exploring how machine learning algorithms, a type of computational tool, can optimize clinical trial design. Dr. Ennist’s work, recently published in the journal Annals of Clinical Trial and Translational Neurology, looks closely at optimizing patient randomization into clinical trials.
UPDATE: As of March 14, 2019, enrollment for the CENTAUR Phase II clinical trial has been completed. The CENTAUR phase II clinical drug trial, sponsored by Amylyx Pharmaceuticals and funded by ALS Ice Bucket Challenge donations, began an open-label extension, giving people with ALS who completed their trial period an opportunity to continue taking the drug, AMX0035.
The ALS Association is happy to continue our tradition of supporting bright, young scientists in ALS research through our Milton Safenowitz Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. These awards encourage young scientists to enter and, importantly, to remain in the ALS field. Today, we sit down with Dr. Yue Li from Scripps Research Institute – Florida to learn about his important research project studying how specific RNA-protein interactions contribute to ALS disease.
The ALS Association is happy to continue our tradition of supporting bright, young scientists in ALS research through our Milton Safenowitz Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. These awards encourage young scientists to enter and, importantly, to remain in the ALS field. Today, we sit down with Dr. Meredith Corley from the University of California, San Diego to learn about her unique research project studying how specific RNA-protein interactions contribute to ALS disease.
We sat down with Dr. John Landers, professor of Neurology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, to discuss the recent discovery of the newest ALS gene, KIF5A, made possible by The ALS Association funding through ALS Ice Bucket Challenge donations. Dr. Landers is the co-leader of the U.S. arm of Project MinE, which is the largest ALS whole-genome sequencing effort of its kind. The discovery findings were published in the journal Neuron.
Our beloved daughter, Carmen Schentrup, was taken from us on February 14, one of 17 victims of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. Her life was cut too short. For the last month, we have tried to make sense of the senseless, and we have grieved with the other families.
Researchers funded by The ALS Association using state-of-the-art technology called an Organ-Chip, which essentially recreates human biology on a microchip, found that the human brain’s tiniest blood vessels can initiate spinal motor neuron development. Studies using this technology to track living tissues on a chip provide ALS researchers a unique way to study the disease processes in ALS and other neurodegenerative disorders.
A new ALS gene discovery – KIF5A - funded by The ALS Association, with money raised through the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, will help drive new discoveries and fuel the ALS treatment pipeline.
The ALS Association fights for people with ALS every day, leading cutting-edge research to discover treatments and a cure for ALS, and serving, advocating for, and empowering people with the disease to live their lives to the fullest. In honor of Throwback Thursday, let’s look back at the advances in our mission areas of Advocacy, Care Services, and Research during 2017.
Researchers from collaborative initiatives funded by The ALS Association, with money raised through the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, announced the discovery of a new ALS gene, KIF5A, which will help drive new discoveries and fuel the ALS treatment pipeline.
We recently sat down with Dr. Carlos Castañeda, assistant professor of biology and chemistry at Syracuse University. Thanks to funding from the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, The ALS Association has funded Dr. Castañeda twice through our global research program, which supported this work.
I woke up this morning to the terrible news that Stephen Hawking died. While I never met the man, and didn’t really understand all he was saying about black holes, I learned a lot from him about what is possible for people with ALS.
Research funded with donations from the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge recently uncovered evidence that promoting an increase in a specific immune cell in the brain and spinal cord of a mouse with ALS was associated with increased motor function, pointing to a potential treatment in the future.
Central nervous system (CNS) disorders afflict approximately 300 million people worldwide. They often span many years and are severely debilitating. And, in addition to the personal cost to patients and families, the economic burden reaches an estimated $1.5 trillion annually in the U.S.
The ALS Association, in partnership with the Motor Neurone Disease Association (MND Association), and the ALS Society of Canada, have come together to support the ALS Reproducible Antibody Platform (ALS-RAP) with a $600,000 grant to create an open-access pipeline to validate antibody research. ALS-RAP will provide the ALS research community with the highest quality reliable, renewable antibodies for ALS genes to galvanize and enable a faster and even more efficient development of therapies to address the ALS challenge, globally.