April 11, 2019 — The Charcot-Marie Tooth Association today announced $1 million in research grants to industry partners and top CMT scientists worldwide, bringing to more than 50 the number of active research projects currently being funded. Every grant will have an impact on therapy development, from improving understanding of disease mechanisms to discovering new therapeutic targets and moving these into clinical trials. The grants represent the CMTA’s commitment to finding treatments and a cure for the CMT community and cover work on CMT types 1, 2, and 4.
- CMTA Announces $1 Million in Funding for STAR Research Projects
- 2023 CMTA-STAR Celebrating our Collective Achievements
- STAR: Our CMT Research Strategy
- CMTA-STAR Research for Demyelinating Forms of CMT
- CMTA-STAR Research for Axonal Forms of CMT
- All Other Types
- Find Research by My CMT Type/Subtype
- The CMTA Is Accelerating Research Through Gene Therapy
- Patients as Partners in Research
- A New Model of CMT1A Using Dental Stem Cells: Calling for Tooth Donors
- A Research Invitation for UK-Based CMT Community Members
- A Retrospective Study of Subjects with Mutations in the C12ORF65 Gene Causing Complex CMT Type 6
- Accelerate Clinical Trials in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease
- CMT Subtype Biomarkers and Outcome Measures
- CMT-SORD: Share Your Story
- Evaluation of Changes on Gait in Children and Youth with CMT
- Finding Your CMT Gene
- Help CMTA Develop Clinical Trials in a Dish
- Hereditary Sensory Neuropathy Serine trial (SENSE trial)
- INC Research Study 6601
- INC Research Study 6602: Genetics of Charcot Marie Tooth Disease
- Natural History of TRPV4 Neuromuscular Disease – CMT2C
- Participants Needed for SORD Clinical Trial
- Patients as Partners Profile
- Pharnext Premier PXT3003 for CMT1A Phase 3 Study
- Phase 2 Clinical Trial for CMT1 and CMTX
- Research Project: CMT Biomarkers and Outcome Measures
- Research Survey About Impacts of COVID‑19
- Stanford Chronic Pain Study
- The CMT&ME Study: What It’s Like to Live with CMT
- Understanding CMT4J: A Natural History Study
- Your Participation Matters: Join the CMT2S Research Study