Neuromuscular Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
B3 for NMD: Bench to Bedside and Back - Transformative Discoveries Leading to Improved Care in Neuromuscular Disease
Background: Neuromuscular diseases (NMD) represent a broad group of rare genetic and acquired
disorders, affecting over 300,000 people in Canada. Given the multiple different NMD
subtypes, almost half of patients with NMD remain undiagnosed.
Objective: The purpose of this study is to identify genetic or other markers in patient
biosamples (e.g. blood, muscle, skin samples), electrodiagnostic studies or imaging that may
help physicians and scientists provide faster ways to diagnose patients with NMD, study
disease progression, and discover underlying disease mechanisms that may lead to future NMD
therapies.
Eligibility: Adults with NMD
Design: Participants will have blood and/or tissue samples, and data from clinical
information, imaging, and electrodiagnostic studies collected. Sample and data collection at
the Neuromuscular Center, The Ottawa Hospital may include blood, DNA, saliva, cerebrospinal
fluid, urine and stool samples, skin or muscle biopsy, and routine diagnostic imaging studies
such as electrodiagnostic studies, ultrasound, and magnetic resonance imaging.
The B3 for NMD creates a streamlined approach to develop the Bench (preclinical and
laboratory characterization) to Bedside (clinical and imaging assessment) and Back
(biomarker, diagnostics and therapy development) approach to develop transformative therapies
for patients with rare NMDs. This study focuses on assessing current diagnostic techniques
and disease characterization of difficult-to-diagnose NMDs including Motor Neuron Disease
(e.g. ALS), Neuromuscular Junction Disorders, Neuropathies, Myopathies.
Activity 1: Improve Diagnosis: Identification of rare and novel genes causing NMD with next
generation sequencing and develop imaging modalities and biomarkers to aid in diagnosis.
A collaborative research team of clinicians, informaticians, and scientists has been formed
to rapidly identify the genes and the autoimmune antibodies responsible for a wide spectrum
of NMD present in the Canadian population, as well as to explore mechanisms causing these
disorders. In addition, novel genetic and biomarker approaches are needed to facilitate
diagnosis and permit the identification of mutations in novel genes, leading to discovery of
the molecular mechanisms underlying the NMD disease state. Novel diagnostic techniques that
examine thousands of genes (e.g. exome/genome sequencing), protein expression (e.g. RNA
sequencing) and/or serum biomarkers (e.g. exosomes) will be assessed to provide a more rapid
diagnosis for patients with NMD. In addition, imaging characteristics for these rare diseases
(MRI, Muscle/Nerve Ultrasound/nerve conduction studies) need to be assessed and compared in
order to provide an efficient, effective and cost-savings approach to diagnosis for patients
with inherited or sporadic NMD.
Activity 2. Disease Characterization: Identifying pathophysiological mechanisms in NMD
Preclinical research provides the foundation for discoveries that improve lives for patients
with NMD. The identification of cellular and molecular events that govern normal muscle and
nerve differentiation drives the development of regenerative-based therapies, whereas the
characterization of the disease state uncovers new therapeutic targets for disease
intervention. Although many NMDs were previously incurable, recent breakthroughs in the
molecular pathogenesis of monogenic and acquired disorders are now revealing potential
targeted disease-modifying therapies that may improve muscle health and prevent disability.
The goal is to assess clinical samples such as blood, skin/muscle biopsies, cerebrospinal
fluid obtained through collaboration with NMC clinicians and researchers to help develop
effective novel/known drug compounds that may act as promising therapies that, in the future,
can be rapidly moved into local and multicenter clinical trials.
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