Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Saturday, February 03, 2018

Faith in each other: sticking together through the challenges of Huntington's disease


This article is dedicated to my lovely wife Regina and to HD caregivers.

In 2017 my wife Regina and I marked 25 years of marriage with several celebrations, including a May dinner in Rome before meeting Pope Francis at #HDdennomore and then at one of our favorite San Diego restaurants on our anniversary, December 8.

Throughout last year, I relished the many triumphs of our life together: establishing successful careers, building important friendships, and raising our daughter Bianca, who will graduate from high school in June.

I have also reflected on how Regina and I have confronted the ordeals of Huntington’s disease, the debilitating, genetic neurological disorder that took my mother’s life twelve years ago this month. Because I too carry the HD gene, I will inevitably develop symptoms.

Last year, former San Diego Chargers PR director Bill Johnston exemplified the commitment to caregiving when, after 38 years with the team, he skipped its transfer to Los Angeles to keep his wife Ramona in an award-winning HD care facility.

“He didn’t run away from his marriage vows,” HD community member Dave Elliott reacted to the news in a Facebook comment. In HD families, those vows imply a heightened commitment.


Gene Veritas (aka Kenneth P. Serbin) and Regina Serbin at the Vatican Museums, with St. Peter's Basilica in the background, Rome, May 2017 (photo by Bianca Serbin)

Avoiding the HD shipwreck

Regina and I have faced the challenges of HD together.

The day after Christmas 1995, we received the terrible news that my mother had HD, that I had a 50-50 chance of inheriting the genetic defect, and that the children we planned for also faced a risk.

Many relationships shipwreck upon receiving such news (click here to read more).

However, Regina stood firmly by my side. One night, as I lay beside her gripped with fear, she hugged me tightly.

In 1999, Regina sat by my side as a geneticist revealed that I had tested positive for the HD gene.

Seven months later, we shared a tremendous sense of relief with the news that the baby in her womb, our daughter Bianca, had tested negative.

In 2011, Regina sat in the front row as I delivered the keynote address at the “Super Bowl” of HD research, the Sixth Annual HD Therapeutics Conference, sponsored by CHDI Foundation, Inc.

Each day, Regina lives with the fear that she could lose me to HD. Like my “HD warrior” father, who cared for my mother daily for more than a decade, she faces the prospect of watching (and tending) to my slow deterioration and loss of self.

However, not once has she blinked in her commitment.

With faith in each other, and also in the Creator, we have stared down the lion of HD. Striding side-by-side in annual Team Hope Walks, we yearn for an effective treatment.

A healthy relationship might delay onset

Like any long-term relationship, ours has had its ups and downs. Sometimes our different cultural backgrounds (Regina’s from Brazil) have led to disagreements. Overall, though, we have come to accept and appreciate each other’s foibles.


Ken and Regina in front of the Sugar Loaf Mountain in Rio de Janeiro, 1991 (family photo)

We’ve built a united front in running the household, helping Bianca prepare for college, and strengthening the family finances, preparing for the likelihood of my disability.

Whereas my mother’s HD symptoms started in her late 40s, at 58 I have fortunately avoided HD onset.

Scientists are still seeking to explain the differences in onset in people with identical HD mutations like my mother and me. I’ve strived to lead a healthy life, as I’ve chronicled in this blog.

Though the data from studies is complex, science suggests that healthy relationships can help promote overall health.

I firmly believe that I remain asymptomatic in good part because of Regina’s love and support, and because of our shared mission to build a family and raise a thriving child, soon to turn 18.

Treasuring my family

In our frenetic society, and as my aging seems to make life move faster, it becomes easy to take Regina for granted in our daily routines.

I feel a deep need to stop time and savor every moment with Regina and Bianca.

As I've pondered the deeper meaning of our marital commitment, I've focused on what's essential: treasuring them fully.

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Upbeat Huntington’s disease film, featuring undaunted family, aims for 10 million viewers


The Longest Journey – a new feature-length documentary film about Huntington’s disease – portrays the undaunted Shaffer family in an epic battle.

In June 2015, for the fourth time in ten years, Renato Shaffer of San Diego led a team of four men in the Race Across America (RAAM), a non-stop bicycle race from the pier in Oceanside, CA, to the boardwalk in Annapolis, MD. (In 2008, Renato also led an HD team in the Race Across the West.)

Their goal: to raise awareness about HD and support the effort to save Renato’s 48-year-old wife Sharon and 30,000 other Americans from the devastating, fatal neurological disorder and prevent it from striking the Shaffers’ two untested, at-risk daughters, Alexa, 25, and Taylor, 20.

Beautifully shot and directed by rising filmmaker Nathan Apffel and with inspirational sound design by Brandon Puda, The Longest Journey captures the heights and depths of the 3,200-mile race, which riders must complete in eight days or face disqualification.

“My motivation is, yeah, I’m going to suffer for seven days, but somebody with HD – they’re suffering until the end,” 50-year-old Renato says in the film. “After seven days, I get off my bike, I’m feeling good, but with HD, each day makes it worse, gets worse, gets worse, until the end, you’re just a shell of the person you used to be.”

However, as in the RAAM, the Shaffers haven’t given up the fight against HD. Along with Nathan, they want the film to help bring a cure.




In contrast with most presentations of HD I’ve witnessed in the two decades since my mother’s diagnosis for the disorder, this often emotionally wrenching film left me, an HD gene carrier, feeling upbeat.

Seeing Sharon strive to overcome HD with the help of workouts and the RAAM team compete in an event that would challenge even the best-trained Olympic athletes, I felt newly motivated to exercise, a scientifically proven way to promote brain health.

I was also inspired to renew my commitment to advocacy.

Huntington’s is so cruel. It was refreshing to see someone offer a more hopeful interpretation.

Nathan, in his role as narrator, indicates this intention at the outset: “And you might be sitting there thinking, ‘Great, another movie about getting older, the age clock spinning faster, and the happiest times were when you were a child and hadn’t faced the music yet.’ Well, I’m hoping for all our sakes this movie’s a bit bigger than that.”

You can watch the film trailer by clicking here.

Marketing the film

Nathan and producer LeeJ Razalan, a RAAM supporter and Shaffer family friend, held a private screening of the film for friends and family members in San Diego on May 19. About 200 people attended the screening, which also served as a fundraiser.

In an interview after the screening, Nathan said he expects to release the film in the next three to six months. His previous films and programs have appeared on Netflix, Bravo, Hulu, and ESPN, and he hopes to place this film with an online streaming site, aiming for ten million viewers.

Nathan, LeeJ, and the Shaffers want to educate as many people as possible about HD, and to raise funds for research.

The professional quality of The Longest Journey, its potentially wide viewership, and its positive outlook could make it a successful awareness-building vehicle.


Renato Shaffer (left), Sharon Shaffer, LeeJ Razalan, and Nathan Apffel (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin)

Fighting until she can’t fight

We learn in the 75-minute documentary that Renato married his high school sweetheart despite knowing her father had HD and that she might have inherited the genetic defect.

“She’s fighting a good fight,” he says. “At this stage, her father was already pretty far gone. She’s 48 now, and at least she can still speak, she can still communicate. She still has a little bit of freedom to do what she needs to do, as opposed to her father, who pretty much gave up.

“When he found out that he had it, he tried to kill himself a couple times. Not Sharon. She’s fighting until she can’t fight anymore.”

“It scares me that my whole family’s out there,” Sharon, her speech slurred by HD, says about the dangers of the long race, which originated in 1982. “There’s been deaths. There’s been accidents, so many accidents.”

Some teams “never come back the same,” she adds. Already by Colorado, 24 teams had to quit the 2015 race, unusually grueling because of extremely hot weather in the West, as shown in the film.

In past races, Sharon helped as a support team member on the road. In 2015 HD kept her home. She flew to Maryland with other family members on the last day.

Valiant people

Everybody in The Longest Journey is on a personal mission against HD, including Nathan, whose HD-affected brother-in-law has two young, at-risk children.

Nathan skillfully interweaves scenes from the Shaffer team’s spectacular athletic performance with interviews with Sharon, Renato, his teammates, and the Shaffer daughters and their boyfriends.

Also interviewed is Sharon’s physician, Jody Corey-Bloom, M.D., Ph.D., the director of the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA) Center for Excellence for Family Services and Research at the University of California, San Diego. Dr. Corey-Bloom explains the causes and symptoms of Huntington’s, providing a counterpoint to scenes in which we see Sharon speaking or fighting to overcome her condition.

As disabling symptoms gradually appear, HD patients “absorb” many “blows,” Dr. Corey-Bloom says.

“These are young people struck down at very productive points in their lives,” she adds. “There’s a valiant nature to people.[…] People are just so amazing in the way they handle it and deal with it and just try to keep going on.”

The desire to survive

The Longest Journey bravely ponders HD’s endpoint: death.

“I think the hard thing for people to […] talk about is that it’s fatal,” Dr. Corey-Bloom comments.

However, The Longest Journey doesn’t dwell on death. On the contrary, it focuses on the RAAM, the Shaffers’ efforts to defeat HD, and their large network of supporters.

Sharon is living with her HD, and her family along with her, to the greatest extent possible.

Sharon and her family do CrossFit exercises in the Shaffer garage, converted into a gym.

Nathan projects Sharon’s desire to survive and her family’s hopes for a cure by focusing on their expressions during interviews and moments of the RAAM.

“I still feel: what an amazing lady,” says Dr. Corey-Bloom, recalling that Sharon before HD onset was articulate and employed by a drug company. “She is tough. I am sure there must be days when she sort of thinks, ‘Why am I even bothering?’ She’s out there. She campaigns for things. Renato makes that grow.

“These are two people who, at least in San Diego, everyone looks up to.”



Sharon and Renato (photo by Gene Veritas)

Good-natured and humorous

Nathan balances the many difficult challenges of RAAM and the struggle against HD with moments of humor and optimism.

“It’s only the end of the first day, and I didn’t know a body could sweat as much as I’ve sweat in the last few hours,” he observes. “Our vehicle’s already starting to smell like day-old beef stroganoff.”

Alexa good-naturedly refers to sister Taylor as a “neat freak” who bought “ten Glade air fresheners” for the two vans the riders eat and sleep in when off the road.

“Mother nature beat us up a little bit,” observes teammate Jason Tate, 45, about the winds and heat.

These and other moments made the audience laugh.

Wisdom on HD

Through the interviews with the Shaffers and their friends, The Longest Journey offers much wisdom for the HD community.

The documentary exemplifies how families can unite – not split – when faced with the myriad challenges of HD. It also demonstrates how people like LeeJ, a friend with no blood connection to HD, provide crucial support for the cause.

As HD advocacy, The Longest Journey can potentially draw out of the “HD closet” those individuals and families needed as volunteers at events and in research studies and clinical trials.

Projecting optimism

Like The Lion’s Mouth Opens, Removing the Mask, and other films about HD, The Longest Journey offers a unique perspective.

After the screening, some attendees had tears in their eyes. However, the audience also applauded enthusiastically.

In talking with the audience, Nathan and LeeJ projected optimism.

I believe that optimism is indeed the film’s most important quality. I listened with great interest to Nathan and LeeJ’s recollections and their plans to attract viewers.

They recalled how the project was born after Nathan met Sharon, who was wearing a RAAM t-shirt, met at the 2015 HDSA-San Diego Hope Walk.

“Everything was serendipitous up to today,” said Nathan.

He explained that a film like this normally costs $300,000 to $500,000.

“The coolest part is that we made this one for 20,000 bucks,” he said. “Don’t get me wrong. There’s a lot of blood and sweat equity put into this.”

Noting that he shot the film in 4K (ultra high-definition) resolution/high dynamic range, the next generation TV technology, he added: “We’ve future-proofed this film for the next ten years.”

As of that evening, Nathan and LeeJ still needed $8,000 to reach their $20,000 basic budget. In an e-mail the next day, LeeJ announced that donations from the screening amounted to $9,000.


LeeJ with racing bike to be raffled to support the HD cause (photo by Gene Veritas)

A raw and authentic story

They will now focus on marketing the film, including film festival submissions.

“This is my strongest [film], hands down,” Nathan told the audience. “I think it has the heart and the quality. I want to open or close Sundance or a really, really big festival.”

LeeJ calls The Longest Journey a “raw and authentic instrument to share the story of HD.” As a slogan to accompany the film, they’re considering “better together,” a reflection of its emphasis on family and community unity.

As Sharon states at the end of the film, in a message relevant for all HD families: “My advice would be to just continue to love yourself and your family.”

To donate to the Shaffers’ efforts to combat HD, click here.


Renato (left) and Nathan (photo by Gene Veritas)

Monday, April 04, 2016

Just living life: a focus on what matters most in coping with the risk of Huntington’s disease


As a carrier of the Huntington’s disease gene who’s reached the age of 56 without apparent HD symptoms, I believe that the emotional release associated with this blog – sharing my fears, hopes, and advocacy – has helped me stave off the inevitable onset of the disorder.

Ideally, I’d like to write in this blog weekly.

However, I don’t always have time, as evidenced by my taking nearly a month to post an update.

I regret the delay, because I have a growing list of critical developments in advocacy and research to report on, for example, the results of the 11th Annual HD Therapeutics Conference, held in February.

However, like so many people in this harried world, I juggle multiple demands involving family, career, and community.

Beyond that, those of us in the HD movement (and in other disease communities) have the added responsibility of caregiving, multiple forms of advocacy, and/or living with the disease or its threat.

Ever more conscious of life's brevity and my good fortune in remaining asymptomatic, I’ve been focusing on what matters most.

Being there for the family

One of my deepest fears about HD concerns losing the ability to support my family. Having seen my mother decline terribly because of HD, I long worried that I would become a financial and medical burden for my wife Regina and daughter Bianca, or, worse, that I might not see Bianca graduate from high school.

In my current stable health, I devote time and energy to helping Bianca transition from teenager to young adult.

A few weeks ago, I acquired a third family car so Bianca can drive my “old” Nissan Altima when she gets her license. While we’re fortunate to afford an extra car, it’s no luxury; it will allow her to drive to school, freeing Regina and me each from several hours of driving weekly. We also recognize that having a car is a rite of passage in America, especially in the auto-oriented culture of Southern California.

Once again, HD factored into our family decision-making: seeking to economize and plan prudently, we bought a used 2013 Honda Accord in good enough condition that, as Regina put it, could last me until retirement.

As my trusted mechanic put it, the four-cylinder Accord’s engine is “God’s gift to humanity” because of its reliability. As a teenager, I had always admired the Accord and daydreamed about owning one. Lately, I’ve come to detest driving because of the crazy Southern California traffic – I long for a mass-transit system like those in European cities – but the Accord has brought back some of the enjoyment.

Priority over the blog

I had planned on buying a car only when Bianca received her license later in the year, but a major connection in my HD journey saved me the headache of shopping for one by alerting me to the availability of the low-mileage Accord.

Rob Millum, a friend whom I met while serving on the board of the San Diego Chapter of the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA) and also a former member of the HDSA national board, works as a consultant for Affinity Development Group and administers the Costco Auto Program.

Rob’s a natural leader who cares about serving humanity. With his auto dealer’s license he helps people save money on nearly new cars and recreational vehicles. He doesn’t need to work full-time but does so to help support the HD community and other causes.

Rob and I have had deep conversations about HD, this blog, and life in general. When I couldn’t attend the 2011 HDSA convention to receive the HDSA Person of the Year Award, Rob accepted the honor in my name.

And Rob’s a darn good car guy, too!


At 2011 HDSA national convention, HDSA Chairman of the Board Don Barr (left), Rob Millum, and HDSA CEO Louise Vetter as Rob accepts HDSA Person of the Year Award for Kenneth P. Serbin (aka Gene Veritas) (photo by Ashley Miller).

In 2010, Rob helped me purchase my 2011 Altima through Costco’s no-hassle program; his nephew was the salesman. I then parted with my 1999 Corolla, my so-called “DNA car,” which had those highly symbolic letters on the license plate and which had carried me through many miles of HD advocacy (click here to read more).

We had upgraded to the bigger, sturdier Altima for safety reasons. Now it will become Bianca’s car.

Dealing with my credit union’s loan department, figuring out the high-tech gadgetry of the Accord (the owner’s manual is 595 pages long!), and other details of the purchase took priority over this blog.

Other aspects of my HD advocacy have also reduced the time for the blog, for example, raising funds for the 2016 HDSA-San Diego Hope Walk, set for April 10 (click here to donate to our team). Support for HDSA is essential in the quest for treatments.

Just living life

Despite the new financial load of car payments along with our mortgage and other payments, I felt grateful about handling the details of the Accord purchase for my family.

It’s reminded me how quickly our “miracle baby” – who tested negative for HD in the womb in 2000 – is growing up. The toddler I used to push in a stroller at the zoo now practices driving the Altima on the freeway. We’re starting the search for colleges.

I also remind myself to focus on the basics to help avoid HD onset: a healthy diet, good sleep habits, and regular, vigorous exercise. I can get lackadaisical about all three!

Spending more time on the essentials, as well as enjoying life more fully, takes time away from HD advocacy and blogging.

I feel that I need a break from the din of the Internet, the 2016 presidential campaign, the TV commercials, the political crisis in Brazil (the country I research), the e-mails and Facebook postings concerning HD, and all the other things that diminish my peace of mind.

The Easter Vigil Mass I attended on March 26 provided a respite, with two hours of chanting and scriptural readings, a stark contrast with our daily lives outside the sanctuary.

Knowing how many of my symptomatic "HD brothers and sisters" valiantly cope with the disease, I’m thankful for the chance to just live life.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Reshaping my career and life in the face of Huntington’s disease (and a note of hope)

In the second half of the 1990s, after learning of my mother’s diagnosis for Huntington’s disease, the 50-50 chance of having the genetic mutation unsettled me greatly. One way I dealt this was to throw myself into my career.

The fear that I would follow in my mother’s footsteps and lose my ability to work frequently caused me to panic. I was just 36, but the future seemed bleak because I witnessed in my mother and other HD patients the terrible devastation of the disease. She was declining rapidly. I thought my own decline could occur at any time and was convinced that, at best, I wouldn’t get very far into my 40s before HD hit.

Striving to achieve the academic milestone of my first book – the gold standard for recognition for professional historians – I sometimes wrote as many as 14 hours per day.

The quest for success – I was already thinking about my professional legacy – served as a powerful form of denial.

Family first

During that now seemingly crazy but certainly understandable response, I often neglected my relationship with Regina, my wife. Regina had stood by my side throughout our ordeals with HD, but the long hours I worked meant fewer hours to grow with her in the marriage.

After my initial impulse to get tested for HD right after my mother’s diagnosis in late 1995, I had sensibly postponed testing to gather information about the disease and avoid the risk of genetic discrimination. Regina agreed that we should delay starting a family until we sorted out all the issues HD presented for conceiving and raising children.

However, after a few years of waiting, and approaching her mid-30s, Regina wanted a child badly.

My decision to get tested in 1999 to prepare for having a family, my subsequent positive test result, our daughter Bianca’s negative result in the womb, and her birth the following year grounded me again in the basics of life and sealed my commitment to my family.

As Bianca grew, my mother headed towards death.

Soon, rather than working overtime on professional  issues, I stepped up my HD advocacy, although always behind the scenes because of the enduring fear of genetic discrimination.

I still spent much time away from Regina and Bianca, yet I also learned to manage my week more efficiently. I reserved special moments for them, especially on the weekends.

Raising Bianca along with Regina and watching her grow into a teenager have brought me great pride and joy. There is no more important task for parents.

Although no life is risk-free, we are profoundly relieved and grateful that she will never have HD.

In my work as chair of the history department at the University of San Diego (USD), I always say “family first” to co-workers needing time off to attend to critical matters such as an ill child.

A clear purpose

In the 18 months since I exited the “HD closet” and announced the adoption of a second academic field, I’m once again reshaping my career.

I’ve reflected deeply on what professional ambition means for me. Whereas career was once top priority, today I think a lot more about human solidarity.

At home, this means keeping the focus on family. In the academic venue, it’s about viewing career as a service to students, the profession, and society. In HD advocacy, it’s a collaborative effort to speed up the discovery of treatments to save tens of thousands of people like me from the disease.

My shift in attitude results partially from my experience as a parent and the perspective on life maturity provides.

However, the fight against HD also plays a very significant role.

I especially comprehend the importance of HD when I attend conferences such as last February’s Ninth HD Therapeutics Conference, sponsored by the CHDI Foundation, Inc.

With hundreds of participants focused on the single goal of defeating HD, the feeling in the room was electric – indeed, almost surreal. The atmosphere was so intense and the connections among the participants so strong that I felt as if I were communicating telepathically with some of them.

Similarly, learning that yet another person has died from HD or juvenile HD strikes me in the pit of the stomach and redoubles my sense of urgency as an advocate.

My academic career began as a search for professional and personal fulfillment fueled with a passion for Latin America and its history. My investigation into the history of science, technology, and medicine – which includes my HD advocacy and, in this blog, an ongoing, firsthand account of living at risk – transcends the professional and the personal. It builds awareness about the global, cutting-edge efforts to improve brain health.

In short, I now have a clear purpose.

Melding career and activism

My reshaped career melds my professional training with my advocacy work. As I wrote recently, at work I raised concerns about the long-term effects of head injuries suffered by college football players.

On April 3, I attended a USD-sponsored panel discussion on ethics and genetic testing, with a focus on the direct-to-consumer genetic testing service 23 and Me. Last November the federal Food and Drug Administration ordered the company to stop selling its saliva connection kit and genome service because the agency said it had failed to demonstrate the tests’ accuracy. I made an audio recording of the USD event and took photos of the participants, who included fellow faculty members as well as two deans. I plan to report on the event in this blog. This is the first time that I have covered a USD event as an HD blogger.

During the 2014-2015 academic year, I will be on sabbatical, that is, freed from teaching and administrative duties to focus exclusively on research and related projects. During that period I plan to work on a long-gestating book on former Brazilian revolutionaries who have come to positions of power. I also aim to continue my HD advocacy, and I will prepare a new course tentatively titled “A History of the Brain,” a subject not being taught in our History department nor in any science department.

I hope that course, to be taught after I return from leave, will inspire students to become historians and to build awareness of the centrality of the brain in our lives, as well as produce more humanistic, historically-oriented science majors.

In general, I feel a growing desire to help guide young people – surely a function of being a father of a teenager and a veteran professor, but also of my solidarity work in the HD movement.

Riding a whipsaw, but content

On April 10, I flew to Providence, RI, to take part in a conference at Brown University marking the 50th anniversary of the U.S.-supported Brazilian military overthrow of the democratically elected President João Goulart.

This was the first meeting related to Brazilian studies I had attended in more than four years. The long hiatus was caused by my growing interest in the history of science, technology, and medicine.

It was also the first time I took part in a Brazilian studies event where people knew about my HD status. I received words of encouragement from several colleagues, including some who have made donations to the cause. I felt very much at ease, and I was thrilled to feel some of my old passion for Brazil return and to catch up with my colleagues.

I also brought to the conference a much sharper mental focus, obtained thanks to my participation in events such as the HD Therapeutics conferences, which, because they represent completely new and highly complex material about a life-or-death matter, require enormous concentration, energy, and openness to different perspectives.

By sheer coincidence, on April 12 the Rhode Island chapter of the Huntington’s Disease Society of America (HDSA) held its inaugural family education day at Butler Hospital, also in Providence. I took part, giving a presentation titled "Opportunities for HD Advocacy."

You can watch my presentation in the video below. For other presentations from the education day, click here to visit my Vimeo video album of the event. (I'll be adding additional presentations from the event in the next few days, so be sure to refer to the album again.)


Immediately after the family education event I got a ride to the airport with Connecticut HD activist Laura Kokoska, who updated me on her HD-stricken mother, who is 71, and her own advocacy activities.

On the morning of April 13, I led the Serbin Family Team in the third annual Team Hope Walk of HDSA-San Diego.

Flying coast-to-coast twice in less than 72 hours (with connections in Chicago), jumping from one event to another in Providence, presenting talks on both Brazilian history and HD advocacy, arising early on the 13th for the Hope Walk – it all felt like riding on a whipsaw.

No matter! I was excited to thrive and make yet wider and deeper connections in both spheres of my career.

As I've learned, my life must not serve my career, but my career my life.

A successful Hope Walk

The Hope Walk was a success, raising approximately the San Diego chapter goal of $44,000. Lead corporate sponsor Auspex Pharmaceuticals, a San Diego-based company conducting HD research, donated $10,000 to the event. Other major corporate donors included pharmaceutical firms Vertex and Lundbeck, both of which also have an HD focus.

For the second straight year, the Serbin Family Team was the top team fundraiser, with a total of more than $4,600. I wish to thank the 44 donors (individuals, couples, and families) who gave to the cause, as well as the team members who walked with us at Tidewater Park in Coronado, CA.

As in past years, the support of HD-focused firms and the participation of more than 300 people, including some of the scientists seeking treatments, lifted my spirits.

You can view the Serbin Family Team and other scenes from the Hope Walk in the photos below.


The Serbin Family Team of the 2014 HDSA-San Diego Team Hope Walk: from left to right, Dory Bertics, Bianca Serbin, Jane Rappoport, Gary Boggs, Yi Sun, Kenneth Serbin, Regina Serbin, Allan Rappoport (photo by Bob Walker)


Gene Veritas (aka Kenneth Serbin) presents 16-year-old juvenile HD patient Terry Leach with the iPad mini won by the Serbin Family Team for being the top Hope Walk team fundraiser (photo by Misty Oto).


HDSA-San Diego President George Essig addresses the crowd just before the Hope Walk begins (photo by Gene Veritas).


Hope Walk co-organizer Misty Oto addresses the crowd alongside Christian Rodriguez (left) and Terry Lopez, organizer of a Poway High School student group established last year to support the local HD community (photo by Gene Veritas).


Tim Schroeder (left), Gene Veritas, and HD support group facilitator Sandy Grofcsik


Walk participants LaVonne and Paul Cashman (left) and Jim Stone (photo by Gene Veritas)

Hope Walk participants await the start of the event (photo by Gene Veritas).

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Accentuating the positive: Olympic medalist Sarah Winckless’s strategy against Huntington’s disease

As a bronze medalist in rowing in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and chair of the highly successful British athletes’ commission in the 2012 London games, Sarah Winckless pursued her goals based on strenuous training, teamwork, and effective thinking.

However, Sarah faces a challenge far more daunting than most Olympians could imagine.

Since 1997, when she learned at just 22 that she carries the gene for Huntington’s disease, Sarah has faced the difficult reality of knowing that she will likely follow in the footsteps of her HD-afflicted mother Val, who requires full-time care.

Sarah has kept upbeat by focusing on athletics and her major leadership roles in the British sports and HD communities.

Huntington’s is always a family story. Sarah was the first of four siblings to undergo genetic testing. When Sarah began to feel isolated from her two brothers and sister after all three tested negative for HD, she turned once again to the “thinking challenge” she had learned in sports.

“Suddenly my siblings didn’t know what is was like to open the door of your genetic counselor and know that you’ve got a bad result,” Sarah told an audience of several hundred scientists, drug company representatives, and Huntington’s disease advocates the evening of February 24 in her keynote address at the Ninth Annual HD Therapeutics Conference, sponsored by the CHDI Foundation, Inc., in Palm Springs, CA. “And I didn’t want them to know that. But it made me different. It separated me.”

Sarah said that she “hated” herself for “thinking and feeling that way.”

“I had to choose a thought that brought me back in, that made me part of my family – they’re so important to me,” she continued. “And I did what I always do when I need to think.”

Sarah went out for a long session of rowing, which helped bring clarity to the issue at hand. She had in mind the fact that every child of a parent with HD has a 50-50 chance of inheriting the genetic mutation.

“I came up with a thought: three out of four, we’ve beaten the odds,” she said. “And for the next two weeks, every time I caught myself thinking in a negative way, I ran that thought into my brain. And people would come and go, ‘We’ve heard the news about John (the last to be tested). How do you feel?’ And I’d go: ‘three out of four, we’ve beaten the odds!’

“And it helped, because suddenly I was part of it, and I was with them.”

Sarah struck a similarly optimistic, sometimes even jovial chord throughout her speech. (You can watch an excerpt in the video below.)

 

At dinner, Sarah regaled a group of conference attendees with other stories from her athletic career as well as her mother’s spirited fight against HD. Though HD patients rarely live two decades beyond onset, Val has now lived with the disease for about 25 years.

I felt infected by Sarah’s optimism.

“In all of my years of dealing with HD, you are the most positive individual I have ever met,” I told Sarah as I prepared to retire for the evening.

I hugged her and gave her a brotherly kiss on the forehead. “You are not going to get HD,” I declared. She smiled broadly as she thanked me.

As an HD gene carrier, I live with the stark knowledge of the disease’s inevitability. However, scientists believe that personal enrichment and staying active and positive might very well help delay onset. And there is the very real hope of an effective treatment for Sarah, me, and the entire HD community.

Sarah Winckless and Gene Veritas (photo by Simon Noble, CHDI)

That night and into the next day, I thought of how I need to maintain my own positive attitude – not just to bolster myself in the fight against HD, but to become a better husband, father, coworker, and citizen.

As the HD therapeutics conference proceeded, Sarah’s spirit lived on as the participants presented new research demonstrating a deeper understanding of HD and continued progress in the quest for treatments.

We all need to become infected with Sarah’s optimism.

Like the Winckless family, we must all bond together in this fight.

As difficult and terrible as it may feel, we are never alone.

“Three out of four, we’ve beaten the odds” – despite her own adversity, Sarah found joy in her siblings’ good fortune.

She has reminded us of a key lesson: no matter how difficult our situation, our lives mean so much more than the fight against HD.

Next time: a report on the therapeutics conference.

Friday, January 18, 2013

Huntington's disease and the perils of adoption


Because Huntington’s disease is inherited, its sudden appearance can send family relationships into a state of shock.

Many HD families can trace the disease back over generations, but in some, like mine, it appears unexpectedly.

Adoption of gene-carrying children generates another kind of surprise for both the unknowing adoptive parents and the adoptee.

The story of four HD-stricken daughters born to Dianne M. Travers, who died of HD in 2010, reveals the almost surreal perils of adoption when HD is involved. Their story also highlights how genetic testing, increasingly common in the biotechnological era, can open up unexpected and disturbing doors.

Figuring out a puzzle

The story of these women came to light because one of the sisters, an adopted child who is today the 47-year-old Lisa Davenport Boudreau, in March 2012 discovered the identity of her birth mother after an 18-year search.

An Army combat veteran, Lisa commenced her search at the age of 30 in 1995 after retiring from the service on disability resulting from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Lisa Boudreau during Army days (personal photo)

“It was like a puzzle, putting a little piece together at a time,” Lisa told me in a series of recent interviews from her home in Wilmington, NC. She and her sisters were willing to share their both exhilarating and painful story in an effort to raise consciousness about both the tragedy of HD and the challenges of adoption.

Lisa’s adoptive parents had told her that they raised her in a closed adoption, which withholds the identity of the birth parents. Knowing her parents would be reluctant to help, Lisa at first proceeded on her own, without knowing the name of the agency that had handled her adoption.

Acting like an investigative reporter, she sought her roots by compiling a list of women who’d gotten pregnant around the time of her birth in 1965 in Fargo, ND. She also looked for Fargo babies born that year and poured over census reports and microfiche of area newspapers, hoping somehow to find a scrap of news about her entrance into the world.

In 2007, with her four children from two previous marriages old enough to allow her more free time, Lisa devoted herself to the task full time. She first contracted a private investigative firm specializing in assistance to adoptees. Despite paying a $2,000 fee, she got no results.

Lisa was finally able to obtain from her adoptive mother the name of the agency that had handled her case, Catholic Charities of North Dakota, to which Lisa paid $500 in fees for a document certifying her nationality and birth weight and for the agency to begin a search for her birth mother. This crucial step allowed Lisa to intensify her search.

As Lisa explained, since the 1960s adoption laws have changed to make it easier for adopted children to find their biological parents. “A lot of adoptees want answers,” she said.

However, Catholic Charities delayed in obtaining results, Lisa said.

“I had to have someone put a fire under (their social worker), because in three years they did absolutely nothing,” she explained. “And then, all of a sudden, when I told them I would sue them, in a month they found my mother. I really think Catholic Charities is using the adoption industry to make money.”

Catholic Charities told her Lisa that she had no siblings. To this day, she has still not obtained a copy of her birth certificate, which remains sealed in an archive in Fargo.

An identity – and a disease

“Towards the last year of looking for mom, there was something in my gut,” Lisa recalled. “For the last three months, I didn’t sleep two hours a night. I knew something was wrong. I could feel her pain, even though I never met her.”

Finally, on February 27, 2012, Lisa received a call from a social worker at Catholic Charities who had been able to track down her birth mother.

What came next was not just the joyful revelation of her biological mother’s identity, but also the shocking news that would instantly transform the lives of Lisa, her husband Bob, her children, and the relatives she had yet to discover.

Lisa learned from the social worker that her mother Dianne had recently spent seven years in a nursing home and had died of a disease of which she had never heard: Huntington’s.

“After the call, I got on my laptop,” Lisa remembered. “I pulled it up online and read it to my husband and said, ‘what is this?!’ It was very shocking. Then I had to tell my kids. It was very emotional.”

Searching for roots

In piecing together her and her mother’s past, Lisa would learn that Dianne, a Native American, had gotten pregnant with her at the age of 16. Later in life, Dianne became an alcoholic and a bit of a drifter, spending time in California, Utah, and North Dakota. When HD killed Dianne in November 2010, she was 62.

Dianne Travers (family photo)

“I missed her by one year,” Lisa said regretfully of her quest to meet her mother.

Lisa would also discover the identity of her birth father, Byron Johnson, an artist and architect of Norwegian descent. He had died at the age of 52 in 1993 after falling off a roof in a work accident.

Yet Lisa’s burning desire to know about her mother’s life only grew. She tracked down Dianne’s second husband, 96-year-old Jim Travers, who recalled that his wife had had a daughter. Lisa discovered both a birth certificate and a death certificate for this woman, Sabrina Del Rio, her half-sister, deceased at the age of 31 in 2003.

Querying the nursing home where Dianne had spent her last years, Lisa learned that a California woman named Donna Scott had handled her mother’s funeral arrangements.

Lisa set out to call every Donna Scott in California phone directories. She said she made about 3,000 calls.

“I was searching for someone who knew my mother and might be able to tell me about her,” Lisa explained.

Lisa also wondered if she might have more siblings.

On March 5, 2012, a Donna Scott in Los Angeles received a message from Lisa. Donna phoned her sister Lisa Hein in Alpine, near San Diego, to discuss the mysterious caller who claimed she might be a sister.

Opening up ‘a rattlesnake’s nest’

Despite her suspicions, Lisa B. was no less shocked by what ensued.

Returning the phone call for herself and Donna, Lisa Hein revealed that Dianne Travers was their mother. Both she and Donna were Lisa Boudreau’s half-sisters. Their father was Dianne’s first husband.

“I’m 47, jumping up and down on my bed, when I got the call from Lisa!” Lisa B. said. “My husband looked at me like I was kooky.”

Lisa B. spoke to each sister in separate calls. It did not take long for them to broach the subject of HD. The two California sisters recalled their mother’s struggle with HD. They also explained why their sister Sabrina had died so young: she had juvenile HD.

Sadly, the two sisters also revealed that they, too, were in the early stages of HD.

“How crazy that her name is Lisa!” Lisa H. told me. “We talked for hours that night, till 4 in the morning California time.”

Lisa H., a nurse, spoke enthusiastically about the joy of connection moment but also felt “a giant pit in my stomach” because of the “rattlesnake’s nest” of Huntington’s that she and Donna presented to their sister.

“It was bittersweet,” recalled Donna, who that same day had left her job as an insurance underwriter because of her disability resulting from HD. “We spoke for almost five hours that night. I have the message (from Lisa B.) saved. I will never get rid of it. She said, ‘I think we’re sisters.’

“We found her on adoption sites and Facebook sites. We said, ‘holy cow, she looks like our mother!’ You never know what a person is reaching out for.”

Donna Scott (left), Lisa Boudreau, and Lisa Hein (family photo)

In May, Lisa B. visited her sisters in California. In July, Donna spent two weeks with Lisa B. in North Carolina.

“When we met, it was incredible,” said Lisa B. “We looked at each other and touched each other and poked at each other. Back at the house we took our shoes off and looked at toes and fingers. We all had the same kind of birthmark on our leg. They both were upset at me because I have no wrinkles, and they have more wrinkles than I, and I’m older. They were upset that I had no gray hair, and they did.”

Their mother’s story

Lisa B. was finally learning about the mother and the family she had always wondered about.

Donna, Lisa H., and Sabrina were raised by their father Salvador Del Rio, who divorced Dianne and remarried. Whereas Lisa B. had spent her life up to March 2012 without knowledge of her sisters, Lisa H. and Donna had known since they were children that somewhere they had another sister, beyond Sabrina.

But nobody yet knew that Dianne’s father had died of HD, nor that she, too, was at risk for the disease.

Donna, who spent her summers as a teenager with Dianne and Jim Travers in Utah, talked with her mother about the daughter she put up for adoption. Later, in the late 1980s, when Dianne entered a rehab facility for alcoholics, she wrote a mini-autobiography as part of her therapy.

Reading her mother’s writing, Lisa H. understood that “it destroyed her and broke her heart” to give up Lisa B.

Lisa H. was excited about getting to know her mother better and reconnecting with her lost sister. In the hopes of finding the adoptee, she planned to have Catholic Charities send a letter to Lisa B.

Dianne, too, seemed ready for a new life. Around 1988 or 1989, she finished rehab in Utah. She took a plane to San Diego, with a connection in Las Vegas.

But at the Las Vegas airport, Dianne started to drink. She missed her connection and never made it to California.

Crestfallen, Lisa H. didn’t mail the letter that might have reached Lisa B. She didn’t want her to know that her mother was an alcoholic.

Although Donna had earlier enjoyed spending the summers with her mother, she said that Dianne became “a very mean alcoholic.” In the early 1990s, Donna cut herself off from her mother to protect herself, her son, and her husband.

Dianne was diagnosed with HD in the late 1990s. In Donna’s thinking, the alcoholism could have been both a cause and effect of the HD.

Sabrina’s short life

As Dianne exited her daughters’ lives in the 1990s, and with the family still unaware of HD, Donna and Lisa H. became increasingly worried about their younger sister Sabrina’s health and behavior.

“Looking back now, we see that Sabrina had the symptoms during juvenile years,” Donna said. “She was a dork and klutz in high school. We would call her ‘clumsy.’ She spoke with a slur. But in fact it was the HD. She started acting differently.”

In her 20s, Sabrina frequently forgot to pay her bills, and she neglected to deposit checks. Her car was repossessed for failure to make loan payments.

Lisa H., who has a substantial background in neurological research,  paid special attention to Sabrina’s symptoms.

When Sabrina could no longer function normally, Lisa H. and her husband Andrew tried to discover the cause of her difficulties.

Sabrina Del Rio (family photo)

“She came to visit us one day in San Diego,” said Lisa H. “It was late 1998. She had had ten accidents and totaled like three cars in the two years before that. I would call her house and the line was dead. Sabrina said the was power out in her neighborhood.”

In fact, Sabrina’s phone had been disconnected for failure to pay her bill.

“She was walking staggering in front of us. Andrew said, ‘There’s something so wrong with her.’” Lisa. H said. “I sat there and watched her walk: ‘Oh my gosh, she has a brain tumor!’

“I had just gotten married, and Sabrina got sick six months later,” Lisa H. continued. “She was sleeping on our couch and trying to figure out what was wrong with her. She had severe depression and anxiety. She had trouble at work.”

Sabrina left her job in Los Angeles to move in with the couple. In 1999, Sabrina tested positive for the HD gene. She was in her mid-20s.

“Lisa, nobody’s ever going to marry me like this,” Sabrina told her sister as she cried after receiving her test results. According to Lisa H., it was the only time she shed tears about her condition.

“I looked at my husband and said, ‘I’m going to have to take care of her. She’s my child. I release you. Go and get married,’” Lisa H. said. “And he said, ‘Nope, we’re going to do this together.’”

Within six months Sabrina was in a wheelchair. A year and half later, she became bed-ridden.

“Andrew and I did it 24/7,” Lisa H. recalled. “We staggered ourselves to take care of her.

“She never complained. She always had a smile and was thankful. She handled it all very graciously. A lot of times people get bad tempers and are grumpy. She stayed her sweet self. She was very grateful. She went into the wheelchair, and said, ‘Oh, what a pretty wheelchair.’”

Sabrina died in 2003, just 31.

Struggling with symptoms

Today the three remaining sisters struggle with the early symptoms of HD.

Donna has battled the depression and anxiety caused by HD. Sometimes she goes more than a day without sleep.

“I’m a very, very patient person,” said Donna, who is 46 and whose adult son is at risk for HD. “For that to change in my character, it blows me away. That’s not me. I’m not one to fight.

 “I’m living moment by moment right. I honestly don’t look into the long-term future, because I know it’s not there for me.”

Donna Scott (personal photo)

Like Donna, Lisa H. had to leave her job, where she was “triple- and quadruple-checking” herself to avoid making mistakes.

“I feel like I have a lot of difficulties with memory and organization,” said Lisa H., who is 43 and the mother of two adopted boys, whom she devotedly shuttles back and forth to school and baseball and football practices. “Everything seems like it takes me so long. I can’t even remember my nursing school graduation.

“It’s funny how your desire to have kids is so strong and crazy. Now that they’re here it makes me sadder and makes the disease harder because I wonder what I’ve done to them. We’re so happy but I don’t want them to have to see me like my sister was and spend their lives caring for me. I said to Andrew, ‘We can do this, but I want your focus to be them and not me.’ I was 100 percent fine having me go someplace when it starts to affect the kids.”

A passion for helping others

Lisa B. decided to test for HD. She felt compelled to help her four children map out their lives regarding the disease and family planning. In May 2012, her results came back positive.

“I was getting on the plane to California, with my paperwork,” Lisa B. said. “I didn’t tell my husband the results. The first people I told were my two sisters. I handed them my results after we had lunch. Back home, I told my husband. We cried and cried. I didn’t know about HD, but my sisters watched it happen. If I had found out younger, I wouldn’t have been able to handle it so well.”

Lisa believes she has experienced early symptoms such as depression, but also thinks her perceived behavioral issues could result from the post-traumatic stress disorder and gunshot wound to the head she suffered while in the Army.

“I’ve survived so much with the military,” she commented. “I’m not going to let this bring me down. It’s your attitude.”

Lisa Boudreau (personal photo)

Lisa B. has fought back by becoming an HD advocate. On January 7, she led the very first meeting of the Wilmington-area HD support group that she founded.

Another of her passions is to help reform adoption laws so that adoptees have greater access to information about birth families and are informed of potential health risks.

 “A felon has more rights to their documentation than I have as an adoptee,” Lisa B. observed.

Finding her family has brought her “inner peace,” she added. “It’s a very powerful feeling to finally feel that you’re part of something.”

However, she also recognizes that this knowledge is a two-edged sword.

“I love the family I’ve found, but now I have to carry the burden of knowing about Huntington’s and helping people understand how to handle this information,” Lisa B. explained. “I also did find my 84 year old grandmother who was married to the grandfather who had it, who passed it on to my mom.”

Thus Lisa B. is attempting to track down the many newfound aunts, uncles, cousins, and other relatives who are at risk for inheriting the HD gene.

“My grandfather had 15 more kids, the granddad who died of HD,” Lisa B. continued. “Four of my birth family uncles were incarcerated. I’m in the process of making a list and contacting these people. My aunt tells me, ‘You came back and stirred the pot.’ You have to have a tough skin when you take approaches like this.”

Any day now, Lisa B. expects to receive a package sent by her grandmother containing a painting Byron did of Dianne pregnant.

“Something that both my father and my mother touched would be incredible for me, for someone who never had my mother or saw my mother or touched her,” Lisa B. said. “If someone offered me a million dollars for that picture, I would say no.”

Throughout her quest, Lisa has had to juggle her desires with her relationship with her adoptive mother, Meredith Davenport. (Her adoptive father, Ed Meredith, died in the late 1990s.)

Meredith Davenport (left) and Lisa Boudreau (family photo)

“She wasn’t too on board with me looking,” Lisa B. said. “And I didn’t want to step on her toes. I waited until our relationship was strong enough. I wanted to look, but it affected so many people. It’s very hard mixing all these people together.”

Lisa kept Meredith “in the loop” throughout her search, she said. Meredith became upset when she learned of her daughter’s risk for Huntington’s disease, she added.

Above all, Lisa B. worries about her own children, all in their late teens or early twenties. They now face their own decisions about testing for HD.

“I told them, “You need to have this information,’” Lisa B. said of their newly revealed at-risk status. “‘Knowledge is power. You have the information I didn’t have when I was adopted.’ It’s a very personal decision. They need to make it on their own what they want to do with the knowledge they have.”