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Advocacy Awareness Compassion Newborn Screening Research

MLD Newborn Screening Pilot Study – Announcement

Today is Rare Disease Day. It’s an appropriate day to announce we have come one step closer to a MLD Newborn Screen!

The pilot study to test the newly developed MLD Newborn assay/technique on current newborn babies born in Washington state will be starting within the next three months once testing lab equipment is in place.

tandem mass

The MLD Foundation will continue to push forward until all newborns are tested for MLD. Thank you Dr. Michael Gelb  for your tireless work to make MLD newborn screening a reality.

#‎mldfamily‬ ‪#‎mldfoundation‬ ‪#‎FMLD‬ #fmld ‪#‎runovermld‬ ‪#‎rarediseaseday2016‬

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Advocacy Newborn Screening Policy Research

Newborn Screening – Should a Viable Therapy be a Requirement for a NBS?

The requirements for adding a Newborn Screen (NBS) to the RUSP (Recommended Uniform Screening Panel by the SACHDNC/DACHDNC (Secretary’s Discretionary Advisory Committee on Heritable Disorders in Newborns and Children) consists of four primary criteria:

  1. An acceptable treatment protocol in place that changes the outcome for patients diagnosed early with the disease
  2. An understanding of the condition’s natural history
  3. An understanding about who will be treated as a patient
  4. A NBS screening test that is reliable for both affected and unaffected patients and is acceptable to the public.

We are slowly becoming better at identifying and diagnosing Rare Diseases, unfortunately diagnosis occurs most often after symptoms are presenting. The great majority of the 7,000+ rare diseases do not have efficacious therapies. More than half of all rare diseases affect children and 30% of those children will not live to see their 5th birthday (1).

“There is always a therapy – it may not be a cure or a disease specific treatment, but we can always do something to optimize quality of life.” Paraphrase of Dr. Marc Patterson from the Mayo Clinic, Rochester MN.

With MLD and many other rare diseases, the diagnostic odyssey can last years and usually there are multiple misdiagnoses along the way.  If we don’t know what disease we are dealing with we can’t be sure we are providing the best care. A NBS for MLD, even without a treatment, would avoid the diagnostic odyssey and allow parents to know up front what to anticipate for the best care of their child – resulting in an optimized quality of life for their child and for the family.

There are good arguments for requiring a viable treatment before formalizing a NBS as well. Test and treat – don’t create a sense of helplessness and panic where there is no therapy. Don’t cause parents to take desperate actions to “do anything” for their child.

In the absence of a viable treatment a whole slew of questions come to mind … who is going to follow up with and provide social and medical care for the family, is there a financial impact on society for increased earlier care, would the role of the family support organizations change, what about the ethics of detecting a disease with a later onset, or parents that want to opt out except for disease with viable therapies, etc. …

Parents and families are starting to clamor for more medical knowledge sooner so they can better care for their children and industry is also awakening to the advantages of a pre-viable-therapy NBS – the potential negative this would have on the ability to capture natural histories that are necessary to get therapies approved being traded off for the identification of patients for potential study and real disease prevalence information.

I am calling for a NBS Therapy Summit or series of summits in the near future, perhaps starting next fall or winter, to encourage all interested and affected parties to share their concerns, views, issues, and thoughts.  An open discussion will give us all indications as to if the viable therapy requirement should be reconsidered.  If you are a public health official,  researcher, policy/regulatory person, SACHDNC committee member, parent, advocacy group member, an industry representative, clinician, or just interested in this topic I encourage your participation.

Follow this blog and I will keep you posted on any progress towards a summit..

Categories
Newborn Screening Research

MLD Newborn Screening – We need your blood & urine!

The MLD Foundation is collaborating with researchers at the University of Washington who are working on developing a newborn screen for MLD that would hopefully address the problems encountered with traditional screening approaches caused by the MLD pseudo-deficiency.

For their work they need samples of blood and urine from 15 affected MLD individuals. All samples would be anonymous/de-identified to the researchers.

Criteria for participating is:

  • A confirmed diagnosis of MLD (No age restriction)
  • No treatment (no transplant)
  • Living within the US (due to need for quick return once samples are drawn)
  • Willingness to prick the skin to obtain blood
  • Willingness to follow instructions to obtain samples
  • Agree to mail samples within 24 hours of obtaining them
  • Agree to release the MLD Foundation and the University of Washington from any liability

If you would like to participate, please send an email to research@MLDfoundation.org

We will respond with the release and send you the packet to obtain the samples.

We hope to have the sample collections completed in the next two weeks.

Thank you for considering to help develop a Newborn screen for MLD.

Categories
Advocacy Awareness Education General Newborn Screening Policy Research

RARE Patient Advocacy Summit – 2012

I was pleased to be the organizer and host for the RARE Project | Global Genes RARE Patient Advocacy Summit on September 29th, 2012. The day-long event with 140 in attendance and over 120 viewing via a live webcast.  Videos of the event are available below for viewing.

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General

Our new blog …

Welcome to the MLD Foundation’s new blog!  We’re excited to share about topics of interest to the MLD, lysosomal disease, leukodystrophy, and frankly, the entire rare disease community.

Many of you in the general public and the MLD Family know us from the family support we provide to families affected by MLD … MLD Family Conferences™, MLD Family Gatherings™, the MLD Family Discussion List™, the MLD Foundation web site, etc., but that is only a part of what we do!

We spend a lot of “behind the scenes” time working with researchers (both academic and at industry) and an increasing amount of effort affecting policy.  We are active in Newborn Screening, FDA policy (PDUFA, FDADSIA, compassionate access, Patient representative Program, etc.), NIH projects (RDCRN, CPAG, NCATS, GRDR, ORDR, etc.), educating and impacting Capital Hill (we can’t “lobby” but our voices are heard loud and clear on funding, sequester, and impacting new legislation), a slew of rare disease activities (registries, biobanks, World Rare Disease Day) and the list goes on.