UAB Creates National Network to Advance Personalized Medicine in Rheumatoid Arthritis

A two-year, $3.3 million Grand Opportunity (GO) grant from the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal, and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) and funds from the national office and the Alabama chapter of the Arthritis Foundation will establish the Treatment Efficacy and Toxicity in Rheumatoid Arthritis Database and Repository (TETRAD).

Led by UAB with 10 participating sites, TETRAD will create a large, sustainable database of treatment-response data and a repository of accompanying samples of DNA and blood cells from RA patients starting treatment with different drugs.

“TETRAD will address one of the major roadblocks to personalized medicine in RA, which is the lack of coordinated effort between academic researchers, federal funding agencies, voluntary health agencies, professional organizations, the pharmaceutical industry and biotechnology companies,” said S. Louis Bridges Jr., M.D., Ph.D., director of the UAB Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology and principal investigator for TETRAD. “The ultimate goal is to better understand the molecular basis of treatment response and to rapidly accelerate research in RA to allow prediction of which drugs will work best in individual patients.”

No single drug is effective for every patient, and there is great variability in toxicity and price, ranging from about $400 to $15,000 a year. Bridges says the next major advance needed in the treatment of RA is not additional drugs, but, rather, a dramatic improvement in the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the use of current drugs for individual patients with RA.

“TETRAD will fill a critical need by aligning and uniting the efforts of many organizations with the common goal of improving care for RA patients,” Bridges said. “By unifying the efforts of academic researchers, we can create resources that would not otherwise be available, such as a bank of cryo-preserved blood cells to enable sophisticated immunologic research to dissect molecular signals of successful treatment of RA.”

Other sites participating in TETRAD include the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research and North Shore LIJ Health System, Manhasset, N.Y.; Johns Hopkins University; University of Colorado; University of California at San Francisco; University of Pittsburgh; University of Nebraska; Stanford University; Duke University; and Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard University.

About the UAB Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology
The UAB Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology is internationally-recognized and dedicated to pursuing new knowledge and translating research findings into more effective diagnosis and treatment of patients with rheumatic diseases.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) is a separate, independent institution from the University of Alabama, which is located in Tuscaloosa. Please use University of Alabama at Birmingham on first reference and UAB on second reference.

Media Contact

Bob Shepard Newswise Science News

More Information:

http://www.uab.edu/news

All latest news from the category: Health and Medicine

This subject area encompasses research and studies in the field of human medicine.

Among the wide-ranging list of topics covered here are anesthesiology, anatomy, surgery, human genetics, hygiene and environmental medicine, internal medicine, neurology, pharmacology, physiology, urology and dental medicine.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

Superradiant atoms could push the boundaries of how precisely time can be measured

Superradiant atoms can help us measure time more precisely than ever. In a new study, researchers from the University of Copenhagen present a new method for measuring the time interval,…

Ion thermoelectric conversion devices for near room temperature

The electrode sheet of the thermoelectric device consists of ionic hydrogel, which is sandwiched between the electrodes to form, and the Prussian blue on the electrode undergoes a redox reaction…

Zap Energy achieves 37-million-degree temperatures in a compact device

New publication reports record electron temperatures for a small-scale, sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch fusion device. In the nine decades since humans first produced fusion reactions, only a few fusion technologies have demonstrated…

Partners & Sponsors