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Funded Projects › FP7

DEM-CHILD · A Treatment-Oriented Research Project of NCL Disorders as a Major Cause of Dementia in Childhood

FP7Status: CLOSED1 October 201130 September 2014EU funding €2,998,795

The DEM-CHILD project focusses on the main cause for childhood dementia in Europe, the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs). The NCLs are neurodegenerative diseases characterized by dementia, blindness, epilepsy and physical decline leading to an early death of the patients. Since no cure is currently available, these disorders represent a serious social, medical, and economic challenge.To date, eight NCL genes have been characterised. There is evidence suggesting that further gene loci remain to be identified. NCLs are under-diagnosed in many countries around the world as there is an overall lack of research, early diagnosis, treatment and expert availability. Furthermore, due to their broad genetic heterogeneity it is difficult to collect large numbers of genetically similar patients. As such, large therapeutic studies required for advances in treatment are difficult to initiate. The DEM-CHILD project will combine the expertise of (i) recognized European research teams with (ii) high-technology SMEs, and will (iii) collaborate with Indian experts on the following objectives:(1) High-technology SMEs will develop innovative cost- and time-effective testing and screening methods for all NCLs in order to ensure early diagnosis and thereby prevention.(2) DEM-CHILD will collect the world’s largest, clinically and genetically best characterised set of NCL patients in order to study disease prevalence and precisely describe the natural history of the NCLs leading to the development of an evaluation tool for experimental therapy studies.(3) Novel biomarkers and modifiers of NCL will be identified to support the development of innovative therapies.(4) Focussing on the development of therapies for NCLs caused by mutations in intracellular transmembrane proteins, two complementary therapeutic strategies will be used and compared in eye and brain of mouse models: a) viral-mediated gene transfer and b) neural stem cell-mediated delivery of neuroprotective factors.""

Consortium · 13 organisations

coordinator

UNIVERSITAETSKLINIKUM HAMBURG-EPPENDORF

DE · €876,160

participant

SAMFUNDET FOLKHALSAN I SVENSKA FINLAND RF

FI · €542,192

participant

ZENTRUM FUR STOFFWECHSELDIAGNOSTIKREUTLINGEN GMBH

DE · €90,072

participant

GABO:MI GESELLSCHAFT FUR ABLAUFORGANISATION:MILLIARIUM MBH & CO KG

DE · €170,937

participant

IMAGENES GMBH

DE · €12,610

participant

GUYS AND ST THOMAS' NHS FOUNDATIONTRUST

UK · €34,532

participant

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON

€401,347

participant

KING'S COLLEGE LONDON

UK · €199,992

participant

Source Bioscience plc

UK · €146,850

participant

UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI VERONA

IT · €357,120

participant

CRM COASTAL RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT GESELLSCHAFT FUR KUSTENFORSCHUNG UND MANAGEMENT MIT HAFTUNGSBESCHRANKUNG GBR

DE · €52,155

participant

STEINBEIS GMBH & CO KG FUR TECHNOLOGIE TRANSFER

DE · €50,000

participant

POST GRADUATE INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH

IN · €64,828

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.