Our process for scientific review and funding is based on as needed State of the Science LAM Summit meetings convened by Dr. Robert Langer as Scientific Advisory Board (SAB) chair and interim meetings between the LAM Treatment Alliance CEO Amy Farber, the LAM Treatment Alliance SAB, Directors, and other relevant scientists and clinicians. Summits are opportunities to bring hand-picked leaders in LAM research together with leaders in fields relevant to LAM for education, brainstorming barriers, collaborations and priorities in moving towards an effective treatment for the disease. Our focus is on consolidating what is known and what is necessary to learn in order to find treatment. We work to identify experts, labs and collaborating institutions/ companies throughout the world that are best equipped to carry out prioritized high-impact research and we pursue high-impact partnerships that can fast-track a treatment and cure for LAM.
This Brighton Summit focuses on further accelerating the growth, development and effectiveness of the LAM/TSC community coordination worldwide. In Brighton, the LAM Treatment Alliance will work closely with our Tuberous Sclerosis Alliance and Tuberous Sclerosis International partners to strategically address new forms of global patient-researcher collaboration and coordination of clinical trials. Through focused workshops, patients, patient family members, researchers and clinicians will shape new initiatives along with the direction of tissue and data-sharing efforts already underway, specifically as they relate to those launched at the LAM Global Patient Summit held in Oxford, UK this past January. These initiatives include the internationalization of LAM tissue donation, procurement and distribution program and LAMsight, an internet-based data-sharing platform enabling patients and researchers to collaborate in search of a cure far more quickly than has heretofore been possible. These meetings will be streamed live via the Internet for remote global participation to ensure that our feedback process and global initiatives are maximally inclusive across countries, institutions and LAM/TSC organizations.
At the LAM Disease Model Summit, we focused on overcoming the challenges of modeling LAM. Without a useful model for the disease, we struggle to scale-up efforts to explore therapeutic options in an effective and efficient way. At this meeting, we brought together LAM experts with leaders in relevant fields and presented those from outside the field with a comprehensive look at some of the approaches to modeling the disease that have been / are being attempted. We mapped out next steps toward overcoming hurdles we face and discussed how the LAM Treatment Alliance can concretely support these initiatives.
The LAM Treatment Alliance is dedicated to fostering and funding research that can lead to an effective treatment for LAM in the fastest time possible. The LAM Cell Summit held in June of 2006 sought to review and establish criteria for validating LAM cells. As we now consider the outstanding bottlenecks we face in scaling-up and advancing treatment research, our focus at the LAM Cell Summit 2008 was on both strategic and tactical/technical challenges.
At the LAM Cell Summit 2008, we revisited the reasons why identifying, describing, validating, purifying and growing these cells matters. We thought across disciplinary boundaries and drew on respective labs' experiences working with these cells and those with similar characteristics. We came up with new insights, alternatives and potential best practices to guide us as we embark on concrete initiatives that emerged as top priorities. Our outcome report will follow. Stay tuned!
The LAM/TSC Hormone Summit brought together experts in LAM and TSC with leaders in fields relevant to understanding the influence of hormones in both diseases. The smooth muscle-like cells that invade the lung to cause LAM are also present in the renal angiomyolipomas in both TSC and LAM and seen in lymph nodes and other organs in individuals with both diseases. Given the distinct sex bias in LAM (only a few cases reports of LAM in men with TSC whereas ~40% of women with TSC develop LAM, and sporadic LAM only occurs in women), we discussed the cell of origin, the theory of the disease, models for the disease and the influence of hormones on the function of these cells and in these models. Concrete research initiatives needed to advance this important area of investigation were mapped as next steps.
The LTA has been working to build networks that support research globally so that every country and every LAM organization can be maximally involved in the search for treatment. This meeting focused on concrete steps to ensure that patient coordination is useful to making research progress in the fastest time possible. Patient representatives from LAM organizations from 17 countries where LAM patients are known attended, as well as researchers and drug company partners. Sessions addressed ways that patients can support treatment research through tissue procurement efforts and via global patient-researcher database developed by LTA-MIT Media Lab partnership where patient participation is crucial. We also provided updates on clinical trials underway or in the pipeline and discussed ways for LAM patients to coordinate with researchers and drug companies seeking candidates for a drug trials.
The LTA Global LAM Patient Summit achieved international agreement to start work immediately with NDRI to coordinate a worldwide LAM tissue donation and researcher access and distribution program. Representatives also agreed to pursue the LAMSight project, a collaboration between the LAM Treatment Alliance, MIT Media Lab, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and other partners, which uses cutting-edge media technologies to create a global research network of patients with the disease and researchers working to effectively treat it; a critical step towards research progress. LAMsight will be in beta-testing for the next few months.
This focused problem-solving forum brought key LAM researchers together with world leaders in fields relevant to overcoming critical barriers to finding an effective treatment for LAM. Critical developments emerging from the meeting included the identification of new approaches to overcoming challenges related to tissue access; modeling the disease, culturing LAM cells and targeting therapy. LAM cell clusters were highlighted as a potentially productive source of LAM cells and a rich medium in which they can potentially be cultured. Topics included: fostering and coordinating strategic collaborations to address gaps and barriers; LAM tissue availability; isolating and defining LAM cells; best practice guidelines for clinical management; improving hypothesis generating tools available to researchers, and more. The LAM Treatment Alliance is tremendously grateful for the tremendous generosity our Scientific Advisory Board as well as the Karolinska Institute co-hosts and for the time, interest and commitment of our individual researcher/clinician delegates.
Established validation criteria for LAM cells and planned next steps for greater tissue access by more scientists.
Established priority research streams for accelerated treatment research.