A restless soul at the HD research meeting
Sunday, February 14, 2010
By Gene Veritas

Curing a devastating and complex illness like Huntington’s disease requires a team built of some of the world’s top scientists.

To that end, CHDI Management, Inc. – the multi-million-dollar “cure Huntington’s disease initiative” – brought more than 200 people from around the globe to its Fifth Annual HD Therapeutics Conference from February 8-11 at the Parker Palm Springs hotel in Palm Springs, California. A tandem event, the CHDI Clinical Workshop, took place on February 8.

In addition to HD specialists, the conference included representatives of biotech and pharmaceutical firms, the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA), the Huntington Society of Canada, and a number of advocates from families affected by HD.

The latter included conference keynote speaker and writer Steven Seagle, the author of the acclaimed graphic novel It’s a Bird, which addresses his family’s way of confronting Huntington’s and juxtaposes the reality of disabling HD with the fantasy of Superman.

A front-row seat on science

The HD specialists form a virtual community where they share information and challenge one another through publications in academic journals, in teleconferences, and via the Internet.

Only occasionally, however, do they get an opportunity to meet as a group, challenge one another in person, and get the “big picture” of the rapidly growing and increasingly specialized field of HD research.

As an official invitee to the conference, I watched the scientists present their work to their colleagues, answer pointed questions from the audience, and discuss their findings over meals and in informal conversation. I literally had a front-row seat to witness the process of intellectual discovery and debate.

Worrying (again) about symptoms

Everything said and done at the conference impacted me personally: I tested positive for Huntington’s in 1999, and my mother died of the disease in 2006. Listening to the scientists discuss research advances and possible treatments was like watching a television series about my future.

At first I felt deep sadness. I wondered whether a treatment would be found before I experience symptoms. Once again I had to “look into the genetic mirror” and see myself ending up like my mother – unable to speak, walk, or swallow. A part of me did not want to be at this conference.

I was especially concerned about the data on premanifest (gene-positive, asymptomatic) people like me. Andrew Leuchter, M.D., of the University of California, Los Angeles, presented his findings on EEG (electroencephalogram) readings taken on affected and premanifest HD people. By placing electrodes on the scalps of his subjects, Dr. Leuchter and his collaborators were able to measure shifts in both the level and location of power in the brain. They found that brain dysfunction clearly occurred in the premanifest subjects.

 
Dr. Andrew Leuchter of UCLA reports on EEG readings (photo by Gene Veritas).

I was shocked to learn that EEG readings could detect changes in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients 20 years before the onset of the disease. What, I wondered, if the same thing happened in HD? Because I have already passed the age when my mother’s symptoms began, was my brain already deeply compromised? I worried about this as I looked at Dr. Leuchter’s PowerPoint images of premanifest HD brain readings.

Dr. Leuchter pointed out that HD EEG studies have been lacking. He proposed that more studies be done, and that subjects be tracked over a longer period of time.

MRIs and affected brains

I had an even more eerie sensation in watching the presentation by Nellie Georgiou-Karistianis, Ph.D., of Monash University in Victoria, Australia. She had studied HD people’s brains using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). I took part in this study by undergoing MRI scans at the University of California, San Diego, in 2008 and 2009 (click here to read more).

Dr. Georgiou-Karistianis found reduced activation in the brains of both affected and premanifest individuals.


Dr. Nellie Georgiou-Karistianis (photo by Gene Veritas)

However, because the study lasted only two years and did not illustrate whether actual changes were occurring in the brain, she proposed the tracking of individuals over a longer period.

Another aspect of her study, which employed diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), demonstrated that affected HD people suffered from significant degeneration of the white matter in their brains. I was relieved to hear that no such effects were evident in the premanifest group.

Immense progress made

But witnessing the scientists’ intelligence, dedication, and passion for their work heartened me. As I took extensive notes on staccato-like presentations that compressed years of work and reams of data into a half hour, I came to understand the immensity of the progress made in understanding Huntington’s disease.

I was also impressed by the many angles from which science now views HD. The conference included 31 presentations (I heard 20) and 59 posters on the latest work done in Huntington’s research labs.

It’s now 17 years since scientists discovered the HD gene. Many people in the HD community had thought that an effective treatment would have been found by now. Others thought it might take decades. CHDI has sped up the process considerably with its huge investments in research and encouragement of scientists through events such as the conference.

Advances in such areas as antisense oligonucleotides and RNA intereference – both discussed at the conference – have brought the idea of treatments and a cure close to the realm of human testing. CHDI itself has identified some 700 potential drug targets.

Thus the problem today is not lack of possibilities, but a plethora of fronts on which the disease could potentially be fought. The scientific community now faces the challenge of choosing the correct targets and finding a way to administer them safely and effectively in humans.

Non-stop emotion

The challenge of assimilating this huge charge of information caused me to sleep fitfully.

I also felt the strange new sensation of being open about my real identity. I fully planned to tell people at the conference that I was “Gene Veritas” and gene-positive for Huntington’s. But my official CHDI name tag had only my real name and my affiliation with HDSA-San Diego.

When I arrived, CHDI President Robi Blumenstein asked me, “How are you going to present yourself?” I told him that I would tell people about my HDSA activism and let one thing lead to another. “Why not write ‘Gene Veritas’ on the bottom of your name tag?” Robi suggested. I thought, “What the hell,” and got a Sharpie to add my pseudonym.

I have been a living example of the many ambiguities and multiple identities that author Seagle observed in people. One of those identities was invisibility. Although I’ve stood on the barricades of the HD movement, I’ve preferred to remain pseudonymous for fear of discrimination. At the conference I took another big step towards visibility. I wanted, in Seagle’s words, to “soar” – to dominate the terrain of my life and the disease that threatens it.

A number of people who knew my blog said they were glad to meet me. Many more learned about the blog for the first time as I handed out a business card with the blog address written on the bottom.

I was especially moved when Michael Hayden, a world-renowned HD researcher at the University of British Columbia and reader of the blog, told me that I was providing an important service to the HD community.

 
Dr. Michael Hayden, HD expert and proponent of "civic science" (photo by Gene Veritas)

He added that he expects all of the scientists in his lab to practice “civic science” by meeting HD-affected individuals. That approach reflected what I felt from many people at the conference: seeking treatments and a cure for HD is a mission to assist people.

The CHDI conference kindled non-stop emotion. My adrenalin was pumping. I felt fully energized to continue the fight for a cure.

But the many new ideas and sensations stirred the core of my being. Near the end, as I was walking alone through the grounds of the hotel and trying to collect my thoughts, I suddenly heard my inner voice say: “My soul is restless.”

(Next time: a detailed summary of the scientific data presented at the conference.)
Tags: cure, Huntington's, disease, scientist, science, CHDI, HDSA-San Diego, Steven Seagle, It's a Bird, symptoms, mother, genetic mirror, genetic, premanifest, gene-positive, MRI, gene, oligonucleotide, RNA interference, drug, Robi Blumenstein, Michael Hayden

Comments

Thank's
Thank you for your update on the meeting and something I can understand.
Monday, February 15, 2010 08:00 AM by Robert Walker

Mr.
Gene..Thank you for doing this. Your Blog is 1 more reason to direct people to our HD website. Your insight is priceless and there is always an element of education. Feel free at the end to direct readers to continue to educate themselves and to donate. Again thank you for your dedication to this blog. You are a really good writer, too, which enhances the impact. George
Friday, February 19, 2010 10:51 AM by George Essig

We are behind you
Gene--my brother George Essig has led our entire family and all of his many acquaintances to your blog. It is the most vivid and real account of all that you encounter minute by minute with HD. Thank you so much from all of us for using your experience to help researchers and the public understand more about this cause. Kathleen Martinek, Greensboro, NC.
Saturday, February 27, 2010 01:52 PM by Kathleen Essig Martinek

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