Enhance Efforts to Find a Treatment for Spinal Muscular Atrophy: Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is a hereditary disorder that destroys the nerves controlling voluntary muscle movement. It is the number one genetic killer of children under the age of two. SMA is a relatively common “rare disorder.” It is estimated that SMA occurs in about 1 in every 6,000 births. Approximately 1 in 40 individuals (7.5 million Americans) carry the gene that causes SMA, making it the second most common autosomal recessive genetic disorder. This incidence rate shows neither racial nor gender bias. Presently, there is no known treatment for SMA, though there have been several exciting research breakthroughs over the past decade. Among more than 600 neurological disorders, SMA has been singled out by the National Institutes of Health as the disease closest to treatment based on scientists’ advanced genetic understanding of the disease. In order to support the investigators, clinicians, and families who are working to find a treatment or cure for SMA, the SMA community, including Families of SMA, the SMA Foundation, Fight SMA, and the Muscular Dystrophy Association, has united behind the “SMA Treatment Acceleration Act.” This legislation authorizes federal funding in order to:
The SMA Treatment Acceleration Act provides federal support to the national non-profit organizations that are investing substantial private funding into finding a treatment for SMA. Passage of this landmark legislation will enable investigators to mount national clinical trials to demonstrate that identified therapeutics are safe and effective for SMA patients. If you have any questions about the SMA Treatment Acceleration Act, or if you would like information about how you can become a cosponsor, please contact Spencer Perlman of Families of SMA (spencer@fsma.org / 202-333-5750), Laura Breiteneicher of the SMA Foundation (laurab@wswdc.com / 202-589-0800), Caroline Gibson of Fight SMA (carolinegibson@fightsma.com / 804-515-0080) or Annie Kennedy of the Muscular Dystrophy Association (akennedy@mdausa.org /202-828-8560). |