Showing posts with label patient registry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patient registry. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

NIH establishes patient registry for people with Down syndrome

A new Down syndrome patient registry will facilitate contacts and information sharing among families, patients, researchers and parent groups. The National Institutes of Health has awarded a contract to PatientCrossroads to operate the registry. The company has created patient-centric registries for muscular dystrophy and many rare disorders.People with Down syndrome or their family members will be able to enter contact information and health history in an online, secure, confidential database. Registry participants will be able to customize their profile, update it online, and choose which information they would like to display, including reminders about their own medical care and general information about Down syndrome. They also will be able to compare their own medical information to that of other registrants in a confidential and anonymous manner.
If a participant gives permission to be contacted, clinicians and researchers who are authorized to access the database will be able to contact these individuals to see if they are interested in participating in a research study.
Ultimately, the registry will be able to link to biorepositories of tissue samples and other resources, with the goal of making it easier for patients to take part in clinical studies for new medications and other treatments for Down syndrome.
The contract, which will support the creation of the registry through September 2013, received $300,000 in funding for its first year.
"The new registry provides an important resource to individuals with Down syndrome and their families," said Yvonne T. Maddox, deputy director of the NIH's Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), which is funding the registry. "The registry links those seeking volunteers for their research studies with those who most stand to benefit from the research."
Down syndrome most frequently results from an extra copy of chromosome 21 in the body’s cells. Infants with Down syndrome are likely to have certain physical characteristics, such as short stature and distinctive facial features, as well as health conditions like hearing loss, heart malformations, digestive problems, and vision disorders. Although Down syndrome most commonly results in mild to moderate intellectual disability, the condition occasionally involves severe intellectual disability. In addition, some individuals with Down syndrome age prematurely and may experience dementia, memory loss, or impaired judgment similar to that experienced by individuals with Alzheimer disease.
"Down syndrome is complex," Dr. Maddox said. "A wide array of scientific expertise is required to address all its aspects in a comprehensive manner."
Development of a patient registry was a leading recommendation in the 2007 NIH Down Syndrome Research Plan, which sets goals and objectives for the Down syndrome research field. Together with the Global Down Syndrome Foundation, the NICHD sponsored the Down syndrome National Conference on Patient Registries, Research Databases, and Biobanks to solicit the advice of a number of experts from the advocacy community, federal agencies, industry, and the clinical and research communities on how best to establish a Down syndrome registry.
The plan for the registry was supported by the public-private Down Syndrome Consortium, which was established by the NIH in 2011 to foster the exchange of information on Down syndrome research, and to implement and update the Research Plan. Membership on the Consortium includes individuals with Down syndrome and family members, representatives from prominent Down syndrome and pediatric organizations, and members of the NIH Down Syndrome Working group, an internal NIH group that coordinates NIH-supported Down syndrome research.
"We're grateful to those who provided us with the advice that allowed us to establish a national registry," Dr. Maddox said. "We are happy that this important step in furthering research on Down syndrome has been accomplished and hope that many families will take advantage of the opportunity to sign up as soon as the registry goes online."

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Call to Action from NDSS for NIH Funding



URGENT - PLEASE HELP! YOUR RESPONSE WILL HELP FUNDING FOR PEOPLE WITH DOWN SYNDROME

Dear friends and colleagues,

We are writing this urgent e-mail to ask for your help!

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is the largest government funding organization for research. The NIH has issued a “Request for Information” regarding a national Down syndrome registry, research database and biobank. They are expecting responses from the Down syndrome community and from anyone who is interested in supporting people with Down syndrome. Every e-mail counts! 

If we have a large and clear response the NIH will be more likely to help us fund a Down syndrome registry, research database and biobank. The deadline to respond is Friday, April 1. Please help us!!

  1. E-mail your conclusions and recommendations about a Down syndrome patient registry, research database and biobank to dsrdrfi@mail.nih.gov by April 1st
  2. Please cc: us at nihresponse@globaldownsyndrome.org so we can keep track of the responses
  3. You can use the subject header: “RESPONSE TO NIH DOWN SYNDROME RESEARCH DATABASE & BIOBANK RFI”

Example of a letter of support:

To Whom It May Concern:
It is morally, economically and scientifically important that the National Institutes of Health increase funding for people with  Down syndrome. We are pleased that the Linda Crnic Institute for Down Syndrome and the Global Down Syndrome Foundation have taken the lead with the NIH in this regard. We support and agree with the Linda Crnic Institute’s assessment of what the parameters should be for our future centralized Down syndrome patient registry, database and biobank. Please continue to work towards this end.  We appreciate NIH’s renewed interest in Down syndrome research and we appreciate NIH addressing the historical and alarming disparity of funding for research that would improve the lives of people with Down syndrome.

Sincerely,
(name)

For those of you who would like to learn more, we invite you to attend one of our webinars.  Please follow the appropriate link to sign up:


Down syndrome is the least funded genetic condition by the NIH yet it is the most frequent chromosomal disorder. Please help us get our fair share of research dollars that will help people with Down syndrome live healthier and more productive lives.

Gratefully,
Michelle Sie Whitten
Executive Director, Global Down Syndrome Foundation
(Mom to Sophia Kay Whitten who happens to have Down syndrome)