Cystinosis Research Foundation Awards $1.6 Million in Grants to 11 Research Projects

Posted: Published on August 22nd, 2012

This post was added by Dr. Richardson

IRVINE, CA--(Marketwire -08/22/12)- Grants totaling more than $1.6 million were awarded by the Cystinosis Research Foundation for 11 new research projects seeking to cure cystinosis and advance new treatments for the rare metabolic and fatal disease. The newly funded studies include research focused on corneal cystinosis, muscle wasting and stem cells. Cystinosis afflicts about 500 children and young adults in the United States and about 2,000 worldwide.

The new CRF research will be under way at universities and hospitals in the United States, France, Belgium, Switzerland and New Zealand. Since 2003, the CRF has raised more than $19 million and funded 105 multi-year research studies and fellowships in 11 countries.

The CRF is the largest fund provider of cystinosis research. CRF-funded research led to discovery of a dramatic improvement in the life-saving medication and to the first allogeneic stem cell clinical pilot study for cystinosis which is being conducted at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Recently, two CRF-funded researchers were awarded NIH grants totaling more than $3 million, leveraging CRF grant money.

"CRF is guided by a Scientific Review Board, a world renowned group of cystinosis experts and scientists who evaluate every research application we receive. Their expertise and leadership ensures that CRF funds only the most promising research studies. These new research projects are important in the sequence of solving the mysteries of this disease," said Nancy Stack, CRF Trustee and President

Discoveries made by CRF funded researchers have helped advance potential treatments for more prevalent and well-known disorders and diseases such as Huntington's and NASH, a progressive liver disease.

All of the foundation's administrative costs are privately underwritten. The CRF issues calls for research proposals twice a year thereby ensuring a continuous cycle of cutting edge research.

Cystinosis is a metabolic disease that slowly destroys every organ in the body, including the liver, kidneys, eyes, muscles, thyroid and brain. There is a medicine that prolongs the children's lives, but there is no cure.

The CRF's mission to find a better treatment for cystinosis has been realized with the discovery of Delayed-Release Cysteamine by researchers at UC San Diego. Raptor Pharmaceuticals, which holds the license for the CRF-funded research, has completed the necessary FDA clinical trials and has filed the New Drug Application (NDA) with the FDA. It is anticipated that the FDA will approve the new medication in the first quarter of 2013.

The CRF also has launched the Cure Cystinosis International Registry (CCIR), whose purpose is to consolidate information about cystinosis patients into a single data repository which will help advance research and clinical trials leading to future treatments and cures.

Stack and her husband, Geoffrey, a managing director of the SARES REGIS Group, an Irvine real estate company, have a daughter, Natalie, 21, with cystinosis.

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Cystinosis Research Foundation Awards $1.6 Million in Grants to 11 Research Projects

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