Artificial intelligence to save the day? How clever computers are helping us understand Huntington’s disease.

Artificial intelligence to save the day? How clever computers are helping us understand Huntington’s disease.

Scientists at IBM and the CHDI Foundation have used artificial intelligence to analyse datasets from Huntington’s disease observational trials to model progression of the disease. They hope their findings will help improve clinical trial design.

Dr Rachel HardingJune 21, 2022

Huntington’s disease therapeutics conference 2022 - Day 1

Huntington’s disease therapeutics conference 2022 - Day 1

Check out research updates from Day 1 of the 2022 HD Therapeutics Conference #HDTC2022

Dr Rachel Harding, Dr Leora Fox, Dr Sarah Hernandez, and Joel StantonJune 20, 2022

A new roadmap to track Huntington’s disease progression

A new roadmap to track Huntington’s disease progression

Researchers have updated the system that classifies Huntington’s disease progression. Tracking progression in 4 stages will make clinical trial screening and data interpretation easier and faster, and pave the way for pre-symptomatic trials.

Dr Sarah HernandezJune 15, 2022

Revisiting vitamin therapy for HD

Revisiting vitamin therapy for HD

A small clinical trial of high-dose biotin and thiamine for treating HD is being planned in Spain. This trial is based on research that links HD to another neurodegenerative disease called biotin-thiamine responsive basal ganglia disease (BTBGD).

Makenna May and Dr Leora FoxMay 19, 2022

A spoonful of branaplam helps the huntingtin go down

A spoonful of branaplam helps the huntingtin go down

Branaplam was originally designed to treat spinal muscular atrophy, but a new paper outlines how it could hold promise for treating Huntington’s. This oral drug lowers huntingtin protein and will now be tested in a study called VIBRANT-HD.

Dr Rachel HardingMarch 16, 2022

Huntington’s disease therapeutics conference 2022 - Day 3

Huntington’s disease therapeutics conference 2022 - Day 3

Check out research updates from Day 3 of the 2022 HD Therapeutics Conference #HDTC2022

Dr Sarah Hernandez, Dr Leora Fox, Dr Rachel Harding, and Joel StantonMarch 08, 2022

Shining a spotlight on huntingtin: a tool to measure huntingtin-lowering in real time

Shining a spotlight on huntingtin: a tool to measure huntingtin-lowering in real time

A new imaging tool means that scientists can now directly measure the levels of the toxic huntingtin protein in animal models of Huntington’s disease, letting us see how well huntingtin lowering therapies are working in their brains

Dr Rachel HardingFebruary 17, 2022

BAC to basics: a more accurate mouse model for Huntington's disease

BAC to basics: a more accurate mouse model for Huntington's disease

A genetically-tweaked Huntington's disease mouse model shows a tendency for the CAG repeat to grow, just like we see in humans with the mutation.

Dr Michael FlowerFebruary 10, 2022

Oral drug may change the story for huntingtin lowering

Oral drug may change the story for huntingtin lowering

Researchers with PTC Therapeutics recently published exciting new findings - a promising new huntingtin lowering drug that can be taken as a pill. Will this change how we move forward with huntingtin lowering?

Dr Sarah Hernandez and Dr Jeff CarrollFebruary 01, 2022

Finding the silver lining: an update on the Roche GENERATION-HD1 trial data

Finding the silver lining: an update on the Roche GENERATION-HD1 trial data

The first round of findings from the halted tominersen huntingtin lowering trial, GENERATION-HD1, run by Roche were shared this week with the HD community. HDBuzz explains what they found and what’s next.

Dr Leora Fox and Dr Rachel HardingJanuary 21, 2022

KINECT-HD trial shows valbenazine improves involuntary movements in Huntington's disease

KINECT-HD trial shows valbenazine improves involuntary movements in Huntington's disease

In a much-needed bit of good news for the Huntington's disease community, Neurocrine Bioscience's KINECT-HD trial showed that treatment with valbenazine significantly reduced the involuntary movements called chorea

Professor Ed WildDecember 14, 2021

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