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Funded Projects › H2020

SVDs-at-target · Small vessel diseases in a mechanistic perspective: Targets for Intervention Affected pathways and mechanistic exploitation for prevention of stroke and dementia

H2020Status: CLOSED1 January 201631 December 2021EU funding €5,998,300Call H2020-PHC-2014-2015

Stroke and dementia rank among the most pressing health issues in Europe. Cerebral small vessel diseases (SVDs) have emerged as a central link between these two major co-morbidities. SVDs account for more than 30% of strokes and at least 40% of dementia cases. They encounter multiple distinct diseases that can be separated based on their underlying genetic defects, risk factors, and clinical presentations. Despite this profound impact on human health, there are no treatments with proven efficacy against SVDs. The applicants have made major progress in identifying key mechanisms involved in SVDs and their co-morbidities. We recently identified blood pressure variability as a major independent risk factor for multiple SVDs, stroke, and dementia and illuminated the roles of the blood brain barrier and the extracellular matrix in small vessel function. We further identified novel molecular pathways (TIMP3, LTBP1, TGFß) that are shared between different SVDs and thus point towards common mechanisms. This EU network, which brings together basic scientists and academic clinicians, will make use of novel animal models and expertly phenotyped patient cohorts to identify key mechanisms common to multiple SVDs and determine how these mechanisms contribute to individual SVDs. We will: i) identify common molecular, cellular, and physiological mechanisms that compromise the function of microvessels in different SVDs; ii) determine how these common mechanistic defects intersect to drive brain damage; and iii) validate the relevance of mechanisms through interventions in experimental systems (isolated microvessels and in vivo) and in patients (exploratory proof of concept trials). Our resources including novel animal models and state-of-the art technologies (e.g. proteomics & ultra-high field MRI) as well as expertise in clinical trials support the feasibility of the approach. In fact, studies by the applicants already revealed novel attractive targets for therapeutic intervention.

Consortium · 14 organisations

coordinator

LUDWIG-MAXIMILIANS-UNIVERSITAET MUENCHEN

DE · €975,167

participant

UNIVERSITAET MUENSTER

DE · €550,486

participant

INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA SANTE ET DE LA RECHERCHE MEDICALE

FR · €555,375

participant

UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT AND STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE

US · €580,375

participant

KOBENHAVNS UNIVERSITET

DK · €555,375

participant

UNIVERSITEIT MAASTRICHT

NL · €512,369

participant

STROKE ALLIANCE FOR EUROPE

BE · €45,025

participant

UNIVERSITAIR MEDISCH CENTRUM UTRECHT

NL · €570,875

participant

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

DE · €22,827

participant

PNO Innovation

FR · €219,391

participant

KLINIKUM DER TECHNISCHEN UNIVERSITÄT MÜNCHEN (TUM KLINIKUM)

DE · €309,506

participant

THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD

UK · €450,000

participant

PNO INNOVATION GMBH

DE · €70,609

participant

THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH

UK · €580,920

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.