CMT Update Banner Winter 2023

Hot off the Press: CMT Update

by | Feb 23, 2023 | 0 comments

As we start the new year energized and ready to continue our mission of bringing treatments and cures for CMT, we have rebranded our CMT Update newsletter to feature our lead research programs including the GRIN patient registry, the HNF-funded research milestones that have been met, and how patients can continue to participate in the process. The CMT Update will continue to be published quarterly.

Winter 2023 CMT Update 

  • HNF is Reshaping Drug Repurposing for CMT
  • Pharnext Unveils the Latest Progress
  • Is this Symptom Related to CMT?
  • Join the Global Registry for Inherited Neuropathies
  • CMT Genie and more…

Learn more on this topic

Related Blog Posts

Now GRIN is Accessible in 141 Different Languages!

Now GRIN is Accessible in 141 Different Languages!

The Global Registry for Inherited Neuropathies (GRIN) has implemented Google Translate. Why did we choose Google? Because Google is leading the way in teaching computers how to interpret meaning, avoiding the traditional method of decoding language.

Accelerating Patient Access to Investigational Drugs in 2015

Accelerating Patient Access to Investigational Drugs in 2015

Currently the FDA is working to update the process for physicians applying for accelerated patient access to investigational drugs, while the drug or biological product is being tested in clinical trials. This will also be important for the CMT community as clinical trials for this disease are being launched.

Do You Have Charcot-Marie-Tooth Type 4 (CMT4)? – We Need Your Help

Autosomal recessive demyelinating CMT4 patients present with earlyonset and slowly progressing symptoms. These include progressive distally accentuated weakness and atrophy of muscles in the lower limbs. In addition, patients may have weakness and atrophy of hands, sensory loss and pes cavus (high-arched feet), and walking difficulties. Further information on CMT4 can be found at Orphanet.

Hot Off the Press – Potential Treatment for CMT1A

Two recent publications from Pharnext describe a novel synergistic combination of 3 drugs (baclofen, naltrexone and sorbitol) and its effect on CMT1A both in the lab and in a phase II clinical trial. These 3 drugs already approved but for unrelated conditions, are combined at new optimal lower doses and under a new formulation. This novel potential therapeutic is called PXT-3003.

Support CMT Therapeutic Alliance

HNF has entered into a joint venture – the CMT Therapeutic Alliance – with a unique non profit organization (BioPontis Alliance for Rare Diseases) that brings professional drug discovery capabilities to translate our research results into potential treatments.

Scientific Advisory Board Meeting

Scientific Advisory Board Meeting

On the 7th of November we convened our scientific advisory board meeting at the HNF offices in NY. We have written a detailed review that has been published and captures all of the discussion and make this freely available to the scientific community.

Breaking News: First Therapeutic Gene Therapy to Treat an Inherited Neuropathy is Approved for Clinical Trial!

The first disease community to receive a therapeutic gene to the spinal cord for an ultra rare inherited neuropathy is Giant Axonal Neuropathy (GAN). Congratulations to Hannah’s Hope Fund (HHF), a 501(c)3 public charity, which has driven this collaborative research in less than six years. Six million dollars has been raised to date to fund pre-clinical and clinical research on this rare disease.

Pharnext Announces Pleotherapy Proof of Concept in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease Type 1A

Pharnext Announces Pleotherapy Proof of Concept in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease Type 1A

PARIS, December 18th, 2014 – Pharnext SAS today announced the proof of concept of its pleotherapy research and development approach based on a proprietary network pharmacology platform that identifies synergic combinations of drugs already approved for other diseases. Indeed, Pharnext’s lead pleodrug, PXT-3003, has shown positive results both in preclinical and Phase 2 clinical studies published today in the Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases.

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