As researchers have hypothesized that lowering (reducing) the amount of abnormal huntingtin protein in the brains of people afflicted with Huntington’s disease hits at the root causes of the disease, leading companies have sought to develop drugs in response, like uniQure’s AMT-130 gene therapy.
The huntingtin-lowering approach has become central to the search for disease-modifying therapies that slow, halt, or reverse the course of HD, a progressive disorder still without a treatment after the discovery of the huntingtin gene in 1993.
"We have multiple shots on goal in the huntington-lowering arena, things like uniQure, like PTC, like Skyhawk,” Robert Pacifici, Ph.D., chief scientific officer for CHDI Foundation, told me in a video interview on February 27. “While it's true that none of them have made it out the other end with a positive ruling in a pivotal Phase III trial, we're at the precipice of the types of signals that will indicate that there is a clinically meaningful benefit by lowering huntingtin.”
In our interview, Dr. Pacifici gave his customary overview of the CHDI-sponsored 21st HD Therapeutics Conference, held February 23-26 in Palm Springs.
Dr. Robert Pacifici (right), interviewed by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin, February 27, 2026 (screenshot by Gene Veritas)
In my introduction, I noted that, because “it had a lot of progress,” scientifically this was the most “exciting” of the conferences that I have attended since my first in 2010.
However, I added, “there was stress for us in the HD community about the uniQure gene therapy program” because we were “shocked” at the abrupt backtracking of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on the drug despite its historic efficacy. This prompted two petitions with 48,000-plus signatures. I recalled that “so many of us in the community are still living with the burden of symptoms, including my sister, now disabled.”
Dr. Pacifici agreed that, until the arrival of an effective therapy, the HD community will have “some high degree of hope, but also a high degree of stress, because I think the closer we get, the more stressful it is that we're at the precipice of actually realizing this incredible journey.”
Dr. Pacific urged that people “continue to persevere.”
Watch my full interview with Dr. Pacifici in the video blow.
A 75-percent slowing of the disease
At the Therapeutics Conference, a uniQure scientist presented an updated analysis of AMT-130 that “supports the validity” of its “efficacy results.”
With uniQure’s announcement last September that AMT-130 had demonstrated a 75 percent slowing in the progression of the disease over a three-year period, the HD community was jubilant (click here and here to read more).
Reports such as the BBC’s optimistically portrayed AMT-130.
HD and uniQure thrust into the national spotlight
Observers and news reports have described the Trump administration’s FDA as dysfunctional and more conservative. After the FDA surprisingly reversed field in November regarding AMT-130, the anxiety and raw tensions over the drug underscored the HD community’s yearning for an effective therapy.
On March 2 uniQure revealed that the FDA declined to accept its request to keep the agency’s original promise, in which the firm could apply for accelerated approval for AMT-130. Instead, the FDA “strongly recommended” that the company conduct a full-blown, Phase III clinical trial (click here to read more).
The controversy over AMT-130 has highlighted the FDA’s rejection of rare-disease drug programs, thrusting HD and uniQure into the national spotlight. Outlets providing coverage have included STAT, The New York Times, Bloomberg, CNN, CNBC, and the The Wall Street Journal.
On March 6 Vinay Prasad, M.D., the controversial head of the division within the FDA charged with evaluating gene therapies like AMT-130, resigned for the second time. While no reason was stated, the Times noted, leaders in the biotech and investor communities had long pressed the White House for his ouster.
Assisting the 60-plus companies involved
Dr. Pacifici told me that he was an “optimist” regarding the “interaction between the companies and the regulators,” who are “scientific people.”
“I truly believe that politics and money and all of the other perverse things that surround us, notwithstanding, that at the end of the day, the truth conquers all,” he said. “I think that they're going to look at the body of data and evidence, and eventually I think they're going to make the very best decision to get things out as quickly and as safely as possible to the patients who so desperately need these treatments.”
Because of the progress with huntingtin-lowering drugs like AMT-130, Dr. Pacifici noted that companies continue to allocate the “significant resources” necessary for Phase III trials.
The feedback from trials has enabled scientists to “hone the next generation of huntingtin-lowering therapies” and to address related questions, he added.
Dr. Pacifici emphasized that CHDI will continue to advise and assist uniQure and all companies seeking to develop HD therapies. More than 60 firms attended the Therapeutics Conference, which had a record attendance of 445.
Other key techniques
The conference also focused on other potential techniques in the search for therapies, such as the splicing of DNA “either to make less of a toxic protein or make more of a protein that is beneficial,” Dr. Pacifici explained.
Several presentations also discussed potential ways of impacting somatic expansion, the tendency of the abnormal huntingtin gene to expand over time to the point where symptoms are triggered.
Dr. Pacifici emphasized the need to intervene in the disease process long before symptoms arise.
“There's a long phase in Huntington's disease where people have the gene, but overtly, to at least the lay eye, look perfectly normal and healthy,” he explained. However, because they carry the genetic expansion, “deleterious things” can already occur, he added.
Another focus included the ongoing study of brain tissue donated by deceased HD-affected individuals, known as post-mortem tissue. This “unbelievably technological marvel of investigations can then look literally cell by cell at those post-mortem brain sections,” Dr. Pacifici explained.
Vast data from Enroll-HD
Dr. Pacifici and I both wore caps from Enroll-HD, the global registry of more than 22,000 affected individuals and relatives.
CHDI runs Enroll-HD, which provides free data to companies seeking to develop therapies.
uniQure’s use of Enroll-HD data as an external comparison for AMT-130 clinical trial participants caused the FDA to oppose the company’s request for an accelerated drug approval.
Dr. Pacifici called Enroll-HD “one of the most remarkable prospective registry trials that's ever been run.”
The Therapeutics Conference included a presentation on Enroll-HD’s whole-genome-sequencing – mapping a person’s entire DNA – of nearly 20,000 of the people in its database. Announced a year ago, this project has already generated 450 terabytes of data.
It has revealed some crucial new clues about the genetics of HD onset: new discoveries about potential modifier genes that slow or hasten the start of the disease.
Scientists learn much about HD from studying so-called animal models of the disease, but, as Dr. Pacifici reminded me, only humans actually get HD.
Enroll-HD safely and non-invasively collects people’s blood, semen, tears, cerebrospinal fluid and DNA and tracks their symptoms, Dr. Padcific said. Enroll-HD thus helps to answer the big question of “how the disease manifests itself in people” over time and how their individual genetics influence the disease.
People’s participation in Enroll-HD “makes a huge difference,” Dr. Pacifici observed, adding that the program is positioned to prepare for future research needs as the field evolves.
The ‘urgent necessity’ for a therapy
On March 5 Amy Gray, the president and CEO of the Huntington's Disease Society of America e-mailed the HD community an update on the controversy involving the FDA, AMT-130, and Enroll-HD.
Gray noted the “urgent necessity” of a disease-modifying treatment. She recalled that Congress had directed the FDA to apply “‘regulatory flexibility’ for rare diseases – tailoring approaches when traditional trials are not feasible or would unduly delay access.”
Gray added that “innovative trial designs” such as Enroll-HD are appropriate when scientifically justified.
“We appreciate uniQure’s stated intent to continue engaging with the FDA,” Gray wrote.
Conquering HD
Like last year, the 2026 meeting had a session on “new enabling technologies and breakthrough science for neurodegenerative diseases.”
“The techniques that people are using would literally have been considered science fiction five years ago,” Dr. Pacifici said.
These included a bioengineered “mini-brain,” using actual human cells, that assembled all of the different broad classes of cell types in the brain, Dr. Pacifici explained.
The mini-brain was developed and presented at the conference by Alice Stanton, Ph.D., of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
“We're going to get her to now introduce cells that have the expanded gene and see how that changes so that we could do experiments in a dish instead of in the living organism,” Dr. Pacifici said. "We've got the best, the brightest doing-state-of-the art work."
To fill remaining “gaps” and “solve bottlenecks” on the way to therapies, yet more discoveries will be needed, he added.
With CHDI’s multi-million-dollar resources, the involvement of big companies, and the participation of HD families, “we’re going to conquer this thing,” Dr. Pacifici predicted.
Dr. Alice Stanton presenting her talk on her human "mini-brain" invention (above) and taking questions from the audience (below) (photos by Gene Veritas)







