In Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease (CMT) or inherited neuropathy research studies, it is the researcher who has selected what they believe to be important markers of impairment in function in patients. For example, it has been inferred that the wearing of ankle-foot-orthosis (AFOs), the use of walking aids such as canes, or the use of wheelchairs, are appropriate markers for “mild”, “moderate” or “severe” disability, respectively. Whether patients agree with this classification is unknown. By understanding what patients classify as mild, moderate and severe disability in CMT, we will know what our treatments need to target, to have a meaningful impact on the patients' functional status. Primary objective: The purpose of this study is to compare patient and healthcare provider impressions of what constitutes mild, moderate and severe disability in CMT. Target population: 200 patients who have self-registered at the Inherited Neuropathy Consortium Contact Registry, a web-based contact registry developed and supported by the Data Management and Coordinating Center (DMCC) for the Rare Diseases Clinical Research Consortium (RDCRN), located at the University of South Florida, and 200 health care professionals attending conferences about CMT, such as the 4th International CMT Consortium to be held in Potomac, Maryland, June 29-July 1, 2011 and the MDA Clinic Directors meeting in Las Vegas, NV March 4-7, 2012. Methods: A brief, anonymous, 20-item survey, in which we measure what the physician and the patient think are important indicators of disability in CMT, will be distributed by paper to 200 health care professionals, and via an online link to 200 patients self-registered with the RDCRN contact registry. Out of the 200 patients, approximately 25 patients will be requested to take the survey twice in a 2 to 4 week period. Analysis: We will measure the agreement between items in the physician and patient groups, and use items with high agreement in a Disability Severity Index.
The current data access committee reviews and assesses data requests of researchers that seek to gain access to data acquired as part of the EPIC-CD project as performed at the AmsterdamUMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
This Data Access Committee and policies are for controlling the correct use of the omics datasets generated within the L1-Architect Project, to investigate the impact of L1 transposable elements in tumours with high and ultrahigh rates of somatic retrotransposition
Low pass sequencing of sequential cell free and tumour DNA with matched whole genome sequencing from five patients with high grade serous ovarian cancer presented in Hockings et al Cancer Research paper, 2025.
Data access for present-day whole-genome dataset (fastq and bam files) from the study titled "Dynamic human admixture histories over the last ~1,300 years at the northern Himalayan frontier"
Targeted methylation sequencing (enzymatic conversion) data of plasma samples collected from colon cancer patients and non-cancer subjects.
RNA sequencing of organoids derived from human glioblastoma subject to hypoxia, plasma, or a combination of both for 72h, sampled at 0, 24, 72, and 144h.
BAM files for 42 IDH wildtype, untreated, human glioblastoma samples from the GB-UK cohort, published in Noorani & Haughey et al. Cancer Discovery (2025).