Patient Resources

Research and Clinical Trials

Webinars

Research and Clinical Trials

HNF is advancing and supporting clinical research and trials for CMT.

HNF has been instrumental in advancing and supporting clinical trials by providing valuable patient insight, innovative data collection, and regulatory initiatives to assist in industry-sponsored clinical trial design and to inform the FDA for decision-making and oversight during drug development and commercialization of drugs and gene therapies for CMT.

Learn about clinical trials and how you can participate.

Without your participation, researchers won’t have the essential patient information to develop drugs, gene therapies, and clinical trials for Charcot-Marie-Tooth and other Inherited Neuropathies. In addition, as GRIN grows, we gain greater insights from you as patients to help accelerate therapies for Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) and Inherited Neuropathies.

CMT Thrive Webinar:

The Key Role CMT Patients Play in Research 

Presented by: Joy Aldrich, HNF GRIN Patient Registry Coordinator

Learn more on this topic

Latest News and Related Blog Posts

Hereditary Neuropathy Foundation Re-Launches One-of-A-Kind Patient Registry for Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease Research

Hereditary Neuropathy Foundation Re-Launches One-of-A-Kind Patient Registry for Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease Research

Hereditary Neuropathy Foundation Re-Launches One-of-A-Kind Patient Registry for Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease Research This user-friendly platform allows patients, caregivers, clinicians, and researchers the ability to manage health data to elevate CMT patient care. The...

HNF is Reshaping Drug Repurposing for CMT

HNF is Reshaping Drug Repurposing for CMT

HNF has partnered with Rarebase, a public benefit precision medicine company that has screened a large library of FDA approved small molecules to identify candidates for various types of CMT. Their tech-enabled drug discovery platform is called Function™. There are many published discoveries on the genetic cause of many types of CMT, including an understanding of the basic mechanism of disease and potential targets for FDA-approved drug repurposing. It is this understanding that allows HNF and Rarebase to target the genetic root cause of CMT.