Showing posts with label Celebration of Hope Gala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebration of Hope Gala. Show all posts

Friday, November 10, 2017

A time for hope: HDSA’s 50th anniversary, a record-setting gala, and the impending release of highly anticipated clinical trial results

This year, Pope Francis’ historic “Hidden No More” audience with the Huntington’s disease community has understandably overshadowed another milestone in the HD cause: the 50th anniversary of the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA).

However, on November 4 the spirit of HDSA, embodied in founder Marjorie Guthrie’s goal of a cure, helped fuel new hopes: the San Diego chapter’s sixteenth gala, recalling HDSA’s start in 1967 and honoring celebrated ESPN sportscaster Chris Berman, raised more than $250,000, a national record for chapters. It was the society’s most successful fundraising event of the last decade.

Also, for the first time, the gala attendees included top scientists from Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc., which, by January 2018, expects to release results of its highly anticipated Phase 1 gene-silencing clinical trial.

It was also the first time an HDSA chairman of the board attended: Chair Arik Johnson, Psy.D., the staff psychologist at the HDSA Center of Excellence at the University of California, Los Angeles, joined HDSA CEO Louise Vetter at the event.

It was a striking convergence of history, people, and research progress.

The gala was organized by HDSA-San Diego and the chapter’s former president, Bill Johnston. Johnston left a 38-year career as PR director for the San Diego Chargers football team, which moved to Los Angeles, to keep his HD-stricken wife Ramona at Edgemoor Hospital, an award-winning care facility in nearby Santee. Johnston now works as special advisor to Ron Fowler, the executive chairman and co-owner of the San Diego Padres baseball team and a long-time supporter of HDSA-San Diego.

“It was so rewarding to see the extended HD community having a wonderful evening and enjoying a series of heartfelt and humorous stories about Marjorie Guthrie, the Johnstons and the 2017 Guthrie Awardee, Chris Berman,” HDSA-San Diego President Beth Hoffman, Ph.D., said after the event. “Generosity was in the air, and we’re so grateful to everyone who dug deep to support HD families and to find a cure for HD.”


HDSA CEO Louise Vetter addressing the gala (photo by Derrick Tuskan)

Marjorie Guthrie’s vision for a cure

More than 300 people attended the gala, held at the Pendry San Diego Hotel, including members of the Padres organization, sports and local celebrities, drug company representatives, HD researchers and clinicians, and HD family members.

In her speech, Vetter described HD’s devastating symptoms, its impact on families, and the story of Guthrie’s founding of what would become HDSA after her husband, folk singer and social activist Woody Guthrie, died of HD in 1967. Guthrie began in a time before the Internet: she placed a classified ad in The New York Times seeking contact with other families affected by a disease mainly unknown, even to New York’s medical community.

“In three months, she had 35 families affected by Huntington’s disease that were meeting around her kitchen table and dreaming about developing a cure for HD,” Vetter said. “That’s how the Huntington’s Disease Society of America was born. And at 50 years, we mark the amazing vision that this woman had to really set a course for a community to come together and provide support for one another.”

Today HDSA provides education about HD, supports research, and advocates for better care for HD-affected individuals, Vetter added. It now has more than 40 Centers of Excellence (COE), which provide a variety of family services and involve the community in research studies and clinical trials.

In a pre-gala interview, board chair Johnson outlined some of the ways in which HDSA and COEs are assisting affected individuals and families with HD’s daunting psychological and behavioral symptoms. “We have a Telehealth program for people to call in and talk to a trained social worker or psychologist who has been educated in Huntington’s disease,” he said.

You can watch Vetter’s speech in the video below. Click here to watch my interview with Dr. Johnson.

‘A heart for people that need a voice’

After the audience watched an ESPN report on the Johnston family’s struggles and leadership of the cause, Johnston received a standing ovation as he approached the podium. Johnston’s daughter Hayley, who has not tested for the inheritable genetic defect that causes HD, appears in the video.

“If my wife were here, then it would make sense that you’re standing up,” Johnston told the audience, explaining that Ramona’s advanced symptoms caused her to miss the event for the first time. “My wife is my hero. I appreciate everybody being here tonight. Hayley said it in that video about this disease: people don’t really know what it is until you see it. I wish Ramona could be here. She would be here, if she could.”

Johnston noted that Berman and Fowler have been the “biggest” and “most consistent” contributors to his fundraising efforts. Fowler was honored at the 2013 San Diego gala.

Johnston recalled his friendship with Berman, begun in the 1980s when he started at the Chargers and Berman was at ESPN. Starting in the 1990s, around 6 a.m. every Sunday during football season, Johnston updated Berman on Chargers news for the sportscaster’s reports.

“We just talked football,” Johnston said. “And then when Ramona got diagnosed, I could not have that conversation without him asking first how was Ramona, how are the kids. Every year, at the end of the year, a check would show up in the mail, unannounced, unrequested, a donation. Our honoree has been a huge friend of our organization and the effort to find a cure, find a treatment, for this disease.”

Berman does more than write checks, Johnston added. Berman, he said, “shows to me a commitment and a caring and a heart for people that need a voice, and that’s what this disease needs. It needs people to talk about it, to learn about it. And that’s why we’re doing what we’re doing here tonight.”


Bill Johnston (left) and 2017 Guthrie Award Honoree Chris Berman (photo by Derrick Tuskan)

‘Advancing the ball’ for HDSA

In accepting the Guthrie Award, Berman praised Johnston’s commitment.

“Billy is as loyal as they come,” he said, referring to Johnston’s decision to stay in San Diego. “Is there anything more admirable than that?”

Berman recalled that, after his wife’s death in a car accident in May, Johnston flew to the East Coast for the funeral. Johnston and other “true friends” have helped him overcome his grief, he said.

“You realize that, when times are the toughest, your friends and people bonding together is the way we all can advance the ball, if you will, to use a football term. They’ve helped me do that. And that’s where we are with Bill, and Hayley, who’s here tonight, and the Johnston family and countless other families just like this family.”

You can watch Johnston’s and Berman’s remarks in the video below.


Baking the clinical trial cake

Earlier, I watched as Ionis scientists bid on silent auction items using a mobile phone app. I greeted several of the Ionis officials, including Frank Bennett, the senior vice president for research, who attended the gala for the first time.

Dr. Bennett has overseen the ten-year development of IONIS-HTTRx, a gene-silencing drug that aims to alleviate HD symptoms by reducing production of the huntingtin protein in brain cells. The drug entered a Phase 1 clinical trial in September 2015 in Canada, England, and Germany. The company expects results to become available in the next two months.

Currently, to protect against bias as clinical trial administrators analyze the results, Dr. Bennett and the Ionis HD team cannot access the data. That’s standard clinical trial protocol.

Recalling a metaphor used in formal interviews about IONIS-HTTRx, Dr. Bennett referred to the project as a “cake in the oven.” The team is awaiting the opening of the oven to learn the results.

If successful, IONIS-HTTRx would mark the first effective treatment – though not a cure – for a brain disease.


The Ionis Pharmaceuticals table: (clockwise from left) Chris Bragg, Stacy Raysin (Dr. Bennett's assistant), Eric Swayze, Ph.D., Carolyn Swayze, Lisa Lane, Roger Lane, M.D., Brad Smith, Anne Smith, Ph.D., Frank Bennett, Ph.D., and Paula Bennett (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin)

Close to treatments

Jody Corey-Bloom, M.D., Ph.D., the director of the COE at the University of California, San Diego, also attended with her husband Floyd Bloom, M.D., staff, and members of the HD community. So did representatives of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, a major sponsor of HDSA galas and the manufacturer of AUSTEDO, a recently approved drug – developed in San Diego – that alleviates HD’s involuntary movements but does not slow progression of the disease.

On October 30, Dr. Corey-Bloom gave her annual Huntington’s disease research update at the HDSA-San Diego support group. Most of her talk focused on gene silencing and the Ionis trial.

She also spoke on her groundbreaking research on the presence of huntingtin protein in saliva – a potential marker of both disease onset and progression and also of medications’ impact. Saliva is easier and far safer to collect than blood and cerebrospinal fluid, which are also under study for markers. (Click here for a scientific presentation on this topic.)

“This is an incredibly exciting time for HD,” Dr. Corey-Bloom concluded. “I think really we’re on the edge of really discovering something here, and being able to treat this disease. If we can’t cure it, we can slow it down.”

To watch Dr. Corey-Bloom’s presentation, click here.


Dr. Jody Corey-Bloom's table: (clockwise from front) HD family member Linda Pohl, Pablo Garcia, Lily Garcia (Dr. Corey-Bloom's assistant), Steve Granger, Ph.D., chief scientific officer at Salimetrics, LLC, Beth Thomas, Ph.D., The Scripps Research Institute, Dr. Corey-Bloom, Floyd Bloom, M.D., and HD family member Margaret Schroeder (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin) 

A true celebration of hope

I’ve attended every San Diego gala but one. As always, it was simultaneously exhilarating and emotionally draining.

I was thrilled to see the especially large group of scientists, researchers, and clinical workers. I was able to introduce several of these mutual contacts to each other. I also enjoyed listening to Berman talk about his career as a broadcaster, one of the highlights of the evening (click here to watch an excerpt).

When I greeted Johnston, I told him that my recent, annual neurological checkup showed no signs of HD. I’m 57; my HD-stricken mother’s symptoms started in her late 40s.

However, seeing “HD brothers and sisters” like Tim Schroeder and Sharon Shaffer, both deeply affected by the disease, reminded me of my likely future unless a treatment is found soon.

Yet this gala lived up to its name: a celebration of hope. My heart jumped as I realized it would set a fundraising record.

I’m hoping it will jump even more when the Ionis Phase 1 results come out.


Above, from left to right, Fran Walker, daughter Sharon Shaffer (seated), Taylor Shaffer, Renato, Shaffer, and Alexa Shaffer (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin). Below, Gene Veritas with HDSA-San Diego supporter Mary Wisco (photo by Bob Walker).



(Disclosure: I hold a symbolic amount of Ionis shares.) 

(Scroll down for other photo highlights.)



Chris Berman (left) and Ron Fowler, executive chairman and co-owner of the San Diego Padres (photo by Derrick Tuskan)



HDSA-San Diego president Beth Hoffman, Ph.D., (left) and Beth A. Thomas, Ph.D., The Scripps Research Institute (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin)



Mike and Jan Neil, HDSA-San Diego supporters (photo by Gene Veritas)



Nina Detrow (left), KGTV news anchor Kimberly Hunt, and Lori Ello (photo by Gene Veritas)



Bill and Hayley Johnston (left) with Liya Sharif and Pete Lancia of Qualcomm (photo by Gene Veritas)



The HDSA San Diego Center of Excellence/UC San Diego/Teva table: clockwise, starting in the foreground, Ameera Haque (UCSD research assistant), Gayle Paddison (Teva clinical nurse educator), Mr. Paddison, Amy Rahilly, Jeff Rahilly (Teva), Aeri Kim (UCSD research assistant), Chase Snell (UCSD research coordinator), Sungmee Park (UCSD research coordinator), Ayesha Haque (UCSD research assistant), and Rina Patel (UCSD research assistant) (photo by Gene Veritas)



HDSA-San Diego board member Paul June (middle) with supporters Amy and Cam Stephens (photo by Gene Veritas)



Scott Yoffe and HDSA-San Diego board member Nan Pace (photo by Gene Veritas)



HD family member Doug Schulte (photo by Gene Veritas)



Former HDSA-San Diego president George Essig (standing) toasts with friends (photo by Derrick Tuskan).

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

At-risk Angels pitcher Joe Smith at Huntington’s fundraiser: ‘I’d give every dime I have for a cure’

No one person is the face of Huntington’s disease the way ALS is associated with Lou Gehrig or Parkinson’s disease is linked with Michael J. Fox. But HD touches many lives, including some we know from major league sports.

Choking back tears, 31-year-old Los Angeles Angels baseball pitcher Joe Smith remembered the phone call three years ago from his father back in his native Ohio that changed his life forever: his mother had been diagnosed with Huntington’s disease.

“Unfortunately, I got a call driving home from our spring training site in Goodyear, Arizona, from my dad,” Joe told an audience of over 400 people at a San Diego fundraiser on October 10. “He told me: mom had HD.”

Then Joe recalled when his mother Lee came on the phone on that day in February 2012, not long after she had received her genetic test results confirming she had HD.

I’ll never forget the sound of her voice,” he said. “It was just empty. It was the worst. I never heard anything like it. That stayed with me for a long time, that sound, when she said, ‘Hi, Joseph,’ but the way she said it […] was different. And it hurt. It still does, obviously. This time, when she got the news, I still didn’t know a whole lot about HD. But obviously, when you get off the phone with the parents and got a 30-minute drive, there’s a lot of thinking that goes on.”

He’s done a lot of thinking – and action – since then.

For his efforts to raise awareness and funds for the HD cause, Joe received the Guthrie Award of the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA) at the San Diego chapter’s 15th Annual Celebration of Hope Gala, held this year at the spectacular coastal residence of Craig and Rebecca Irving. Craig is a businessman and philanthropist.


Above, Joe Smith and mother Lee (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin). Below, Celebration of Hope Gala attendees mingling before the start of dinner and the formal program (photo by Mike Nowak).



Staring HD in the face

Joe remembered his family’s four-hour drives from southern Ohio to Cleveland to visit Lee’s mother, who, the family knew, suffered from HD. Seeing his grandmother’s progressively worsening symptoms at each visit left Joe sad and concerned as a child and teenager.

“I think that’s the scariest part,” Joe continued. “It’s one thing, I think, to go through life, or to have something that not necessarily you don’t know about, but […] my mom took care of my grandma, she went to doctor visits with my grandma, she was on the phone all the time with my grandma.

“When you know the road you’re heading down, and right now there’s nothing that you can do about it, you’re just going. You’re hoping there’s light. You got hope. You got faith. But at the end of the day, right now, there’s no cure.

Lee did not speak at the gala but talked about her symptoms in a brief video shown to the audience.

“She stares it right in the face every day,” Joe said, referring several times to his mother’s fortitude.

Joe ended his speech with a call to boost fundraising for HD research.

I’d give every dime I have if they had a cure today,” he declared.

You can watch Joe’s speech in the video below. View other videos of the event by clicking here.


Taking public action

As the children of an HD-affected parent, both Joe and his 29-year-old sister Megan Nein have a 50-50 chance of inheriting the genetic defect.

Joe has previously talked to the press about his fears of living at risk.

“My sister has three kids and she hasn't been tested,” Joe said last March. “I got married recently, and I'll get tested before we have kids.”

He didn’t speak directly about his fears at the gala, but they were palpable throughout his speech.

Both Joe's and HDSA CEO Louise Vetter’s comments once again demonstrated how HD can devastate the extended family because of its genetic cause and difficult caregiving burden.

It’s not easy to come out and say you’re from an HD family,” Vetter said in introducing Joe. “If one of your parents has it, you don’t know if you have it or not. So it takes a lot of courage to face your future.”

Recalling Woody Guthrie’s widow Marjorie’s founding of HDSA in 1967, the organization recognized Joe with the Guthrie Award because of his “bravery” in confronting HD, she said.

Too often conversations about HD take place “behind closed doors,Vetter observed.

The Smith family has “made it public and they’ve created a call to action,” she explained.


HDSA CEO Louise Vetter (photo by Mike Nowak)

The community emerging as its own spokesperson

For older generations of Americans, songwriter-activist Guthrie symbolized HD.

In recent decades, with younger generations unacquainted with Guthrie, many in the Huntington’s community have attributed the lack of awareness about HD – ironically one of the most common of the rare diseases – to the lack of a celebrity such as Michael J. Fox in the sphere of Parkinson’s disease.

Without national opinion polling on HD, we can’t really know if this is the case.

What’s important is that more HD family members are telling their stories publicly than ever before, and HD is gaining exposure.

Like 33-year-old filmmaker-actress Marianna Palka, who revealed her HD genetic test results in an HBO film that premiered in June, Joe is emerging as a key new spokesperson for the HD cause.

Two other successful athletes – former Olympic rower Sarah Winckless and former National Hockey League player Jake Dowell – have shared their HD stories.

In June, another, award-winning film, the documentary The Huntington’s Disease Project: Removing the Mask, was released.

Networking for the cause

Joe’s advocacy is helped by the fact that professional baseball maintains a huge fan base.

Joe and his family have started a foundation, Help Cure HD, to raise money for research on deep brain stimulation (DBS) as a potential treatment for HD. (For years doctors have used DBS to treat Parkinson’s disease.) So far Help Cure HD has raised nearly $400,000.

Joe’s wife is Allie LaForce, a TV reporter for CBS Sports. In January, Allie did a feature on Bill Johnston, the public relations director of the National Football League’s San Diego Chargers, and his fight against HD. Bill’s wife Ramona, who has HD, now lives in a nursing home.

The main mover behind the smartly produced HDSA-San Diego galas, Bill has helped raise several million dollars for HDSA through those events and numerous others.

Bill uses his contacts in the upper echelons of business and pro sports to invite speakers like Joe and garner corporate sponsors such as the B. H. Gold Insurance Agency. HDSA also honored B.H. Gold President Bill Habeger with the Guthrie Award for his support of the cause.

“May these galas soon be victory galas,” Habeger told the audience.


HDSA-San Diego President Burt Brigida (left), B.H. Gold President Bill Habeger, HDSA CEO Vetter, and HDSA-San Diego immediate past president George Essig (photo by Mike Nowak)

From the heart, emboldening our community

As they arrived at the gala, I introduced myself to Joe, Lee, Joe’s father Mike, and Tim Mead, the Angels’ vice president for communications.

I told Joe that I was also from Ohio, that my mother had died of HD, and that I carried the genetic defect. I told him that he could rely on the San Diego chapter, HDSA, and me for anything he and his family might need in the struggle against HD.

Lee and I shared a few words about our common Cleveland connection. When she mentioned that she was 56, I said I was right there with her at 55.

At 56, my own mother had the involuntary movements typical in HD and was starting to lose her ability to reason.


Joe (left), Lee, and Mike Smith with Tim Mead, vice president for communications, Los Angeles Angels (photo by Gene Veritas)

I thought of how lucky I was to remain asymptomatic and participate fully in the gala.

After his speech, Joe asked my opinion.

“You hit it right on the mark,” I said. “You spoke from the heart.”

Later, just before the end of the gala, I spoke again with Joe. “We are brothers in this cause,” I said, putting my arm around his shoulder.

Joe raised awareness and money, but most importantly he has emboldened our fellow HD brothers and sisters to join the fight. Having every dime in the world won't bring treatments unless we have enough participants in the all-crucial research studies and clinical trials.


Joe Smith (left) and Gene Veritas (photo by Mike Nowak). Watch more videos of the gala by clicking here.