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Coalition of
Grassroots Parkinson's Patients and Organizations<
9/13/05, Press Release
LOUISVILLE, Ky., Sept. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- Sunday's CBS News program "60
Minutes" profiled several courageous Parkinson's patients who volunteered
for
Amgen, Inc.'s clinical trials of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor
(GDNF), a promising Parkinson's treatment for which the biotech giant
company
holds the patent. Today, September 13, 2005, a coalition of grassroots
Parkinson's patients and organizations published an open letter to Amgen
President and CEO Kevin Sharer in a full-page ad in the Ventura County Star,
where Amgen is headquartered, urging him to restart human trials of the
growth
factor or license it to a company that will.
Clinical trials have shown GDNF may be the first treatment to actually
reverse the course of this terrible and presently incurable disease. Yet
Amgen
abruptly halted its own trials, refusing to allow trial participants or
researchers any continued use of GDNF. Without GDNF, patients who had
recovered their abilities to walk, garden, drive, eat, read, and work have
returned to their wheelchairs and walkers.
"The '60 Minutes' segment casts doubt on Amgen's claims that GDNF is
ineffective and unsafe," said the group's spokesperson, Ann Wasson. "And new
physical evidence from the autopsy of an earlier trial participant proves
that
GDNF can regenerate the dopamine-producing cells that Parkinson's patients
need, and actually reverse the progress of the disease."
"This is a milestone in Parkinson's research, a legitimate hope grounded
in scientific data and observation," stated Ms. Wasson, 48, of Kentucky,
diagnosed with Parkinson's at age 37.
"There are more than one million people with Parkinson's across America
who are slowly succumbing to this debilitating disease. The next five to ten
years will not only see the loss of thousands of Americans to complete
immobility and death, but will see even more Americans join the ranks of
those
suffering from Parkinson's disease without hope," said Paula Wittekind, a
patient advocate from Florida, who has established a web-site for
neurological
advocacy,
http://www.GrassrootsConnection.com.
Clinical Trial Participant and coalition member Roger Thacker, who was
featured in the "60 Minutes" segment, said, "GDNF is a means of hope and
help
for those who suffer from this cruel disease. It could be the miracle needed
to save a generation of patients."
"Time is not a luxury that people with Parkinson's disease can afford,"
said Rees Jenkins, a North Carolina patient advocate. "Delaying access to
promising new treatments can mean the difference between life and death for
many patients. Restart human clinical trials on GDNF. Do what is right."
Contact:
Ann Wasson
anjeac@yahoo.com
502-895-9707
This release was issued through eReleases(TM). For more
information,
visit
http://www.ereleases.com.
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