Quarterly Newsletter of the NIH Rare Diseases Clinical Research Network
December 2010

www.RareDiseasesNetwork.org

In This Issue

Introducing Spotlight on Rare Diseases

The NIH Rare Diseases Clinical Research Network (RDCRN) Doubles in Size

Message from Alan Percy, RDCRN Steering Committee Chair

About Spotlight

Current Issue of Spotlight

Network News and Events

World Rare Disease Day
February 28, 2011
rarediseaseday.us

7th Annual World Symposium, Research for Lysosomal Diseases
February 16-18, 2011

5th International Dystonia Symposium
Barcelona, Spain
October 20-22 2011

Featured Event:

2nd Annual Conference on Clinical Research for Rare Diseases (CCRRD) >> More

Rare Diseases Headlines:

President Signs "Improving Access to Clinical Trials Act" into law
>> More

CTSA Consortium to Enhance Support of Rare Diseases Research
>> More

IOM Releases Report on Accelerating Rare Diseases Research
>> More

Do you have thoughts about this eNewsletter? We want to hear from you.

Send comments to RDNWebmaster@epi.usf.edu

President Signs "Improving Access to Clinical Trials Act" into law

On Oct. 15 2010, President Obama signed the "Improving Access to Clinical Trials Law". This was legislation championed by over 120 health advocacy organizations. It will enable patients with rare diseases to participate in clinical trials without losing eligibility for public healthcare benefits.

"We are thankful to the rare disease advocates and our champions in Congress who made this momentous achievement possible," says Robert J. Beall, Ph.D., president and CEO of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. "This important legislation will benefit 25 million Americans with rare diseases and will help swiftly move promising new treatments from the research stage to the patients who need them most."

Previous law barred many people receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) from accepting research compensation because it could make them ineligible to receive government medical benefits. This penalty had prevented significant numbers of people with rare diseases from participating in clinical studies. With limited patient populations with rare disorders, this barrier presented challenges for finding enough people to participate in research studies evaluating the effectiveness of promising new drugs.

Passage of this legislation should remove the concern of losing public health care benefits for participants and facilitate accrual of patients with rare diseases for clinical research.