Researcher receives $7 million for imaging studies in Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Researcher receives $7 million for imaging studies in Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Dr. Krista Vandenborne

Dr. Krista Vandenborne

A new five-year, $7.15 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will support the UF’s continued study of MRI to track Duchenne muscular dystrophy disease progression.

Duchenne muscular dystrophy affects about one of every 3,500 to 5,000 boys born each year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The disease causes the muscles that control movement to progressively weaken and lose the ability to regenerate, eventually replacing muscle tissue with fat and scar tissue. Because of muscle loss, many patients need a wheelchair by age 12.

In a previous multisite study funded by a $7.5 million NIH grant, UF researchers demonstrated that MRI technology provides a precise, noninvasive measurement of diseased leg muscle tissue in boys with Duchenne. MRI has the potential to offer rapid feedback on the effects of new therapies in clinical trials, allowing scientists to detect muscle changes from therapeutic treatments in as little as a few months, said lead investigator Krista Vandenborne, Ph.D., P.T., a professor and chair of the department of physical therapy in the College of Public Health and Health Professions.

“Rather than waiting a year or two years, we can now assess in a matter of months whether a treatment is working,” she said. “From a drug development standpoint and for helping to move the field forward, MRI has had an enormous impact. I think everyone in the Duchenne community is now convinced of the importance of MRI.”

For the new five-year study, Vandenborne, and Co-Director H. Lee Sweeney, Ph.D., the Thomas H. Maren, M.D., eminent scholar chair in pharmacology and therapeutics in the UF College of Medicine, and other team members — including researchers at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Oregon Health & Science University and Shriners Hospital for Children – Portland — will continue to follow Duchenne muscular dystrophy progression in the 136 boys who participated in the first imaging project. The researchers also will test the use of MRI for measurements of arm muscles. If measurements in the arm offer the same sensitivity and reliability as tests of leg muscles, they could greatly increase the number of boys with Duchenne who can participate in drug trials, which have been limited to boys who can still walk.