ALS Center of Excellence https://www.umich-als.org Pranger ALS Clinic Wed, 01 Jun 2022 16:18:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.umich-als.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/cropped-download-32x32.png ALS Center of Excellence https://www.umich-als.org 32 32 159626766 Multidisciplinary Team Publishes Paper on ALS Occupational Risk https://www.umich-als.org/multidisciplinary-team-publishes-paper-on-als-occupational-risk/ Fri, 20 May 2022 16:11:38 +0000 https://www.umich-als.org/?p=1910

A robust partnership among the NeuroNetwork for Emerging Therapies, the ALS Center of Excellence, and the University of Michigan School of Public Health has produced an important publication in the International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, entitled “Associations of self‑reported occupational exposures and settings to ALS: a case-control study.”

The Background:

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that attacks motor neurons. There are currently no effective treatments, and the disease results in death approximately two to four years after diagnosis.

Approximately 85% of ALS is considered sporadic, meaning there is no single gene mutation underlying the disorder. While the full picture of what causes this form of ALS is incomplete, a combination of genetic and environmental factors are believed to drive disease risk and progression (Goutman 2017).  Researchers know that if they could identify those environmental exposures, they would be able to take a critical step to understand the disease and point to specific exposures that should be avoided to decrease ALS risk disease (Goutman and Feldman 2020).

Previous Research:

The team’s previous research has shown that residential pesticide exposure and concentrations of persistent organic pollutants in the blood are associated with higher risks of developing ALS (Su et al.

2016; Yu et al. 2014). Its studies have also shown that higher concentrations of these persistent organic pollutants in the blood are associated with faster disease progression. (Goutman et al. 2019).

It’s clear that occupational setting is an important exposure factor, and exposures to certain materials have been associated with increased ALS risk (Visser et al. 2019; Malek et al. 2014; Dickerson et al. 2019). These findings have aided researchers in identifying certain occupational sectors with increased ALS risk, including the manufacturing, mechanical, military, painting, precision metal, and construction industries (Andrew et al. 2020, 2017; Fang et al. 2009).  The next step is to identify which occupations are at higher ALS risk, along with the job- and task-specific exposures that increase this risk.

The Team from the NeuroNetwork for Emerging Therapies:

  • Eva Feldman, MD, PhD, Director, ALS Center of Excellence
  • Stephen Goutman, MD, Director of the Pranger ALS
  • Stuart Batterman, PhD, Professor of Environmental Sciences and Global Public Health, School of Public Health
  • Bhramar Mukherjee, PhD, Chair of Biostatistics and Professor of Epidemiology and Global Health, School of Public Health
  • Jonathan Boss, doctoral student, School of Public Health
  • Christopher Godwin, lab technician, School of Public Health.

This Study:

The research team sought to “identify occupational exposures that are associated with a higher risk of ALS using both survey and standard occupational classification (SOC) coding procedures.”

ALS participants and neurologically healthy controls recruited in Michigan completed a detailed exposure assessment based on their four most recent and longest-held occupations. Exposure scores were generated from this survey, and occupations were assigned to SOC codes by experienced exposure scientists.

The study reported that ALS participants experienced higher occupational exposure to particulate matter, volatile organic compounds metals, and combustion and diesel exhaust pollutants prior to their ALS diagnosis when adjusted for sex, age, and military service as compared to control subjects. Work in “production occupations” was also associated with a higher ALS risk.

“Understanding these non-genetic ALS risk factors is critically important to identify factors that increase disease risk, underlying mechanisms, and potential preventative strategies,” explained Dr. Goutman. “Our goal is to one day make ALS a preventable disease.”

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Dr. Feldman Featured on WDIV NBC News in Detroit https://www.umich-als.org/dr-feldman-featured-on-wdiv-nbc-news-in-detroit/ Fri, 04 Mar 2022 17:54:22 +0000 https://www.umich-als.org/?p=1869 Michigan native and U.S. veteran Melissa Siebert was diagnosed with ALS in early February.  One item on her bucket list is to raise awareness about ALS and the fact that veterans have two times the prevalence of the disease.  Dr. Eva Feldman and NBC WDIV joined together to fulfill this wish.

The story from clickondetroit.com:

Veteran diagnosed with ALS raises thousands for bucket list, medical research

Melissa Siebert is the mother of 2 young children

DETROIT – Michigan native and U.S. veteran Melissa Siebert was diagnosed with ALS early February.

“To hear that when you’re 41 years old, is crushing,” said Siebert. “The neurologist even cried telling me because I was the fifth person that he had diagnosed in 10 days.

Siebert served in Afghanistan and went to a VA hospital in Virginia where she lives meaning those four other patients her neurologist diagnosed were also veterans.

Dr. Eva Feldman, University of Michigan professor of neurology and director of its ALS Center of Excellence said veterans are at a higher risk.

“The average risk is somewhere between two and three fold higher if you have served in the military, versus if you have not served in the military, in developing ALS and there’s a particularly high peak in Gulf War veterans,” Feldman said.

Multiple studies have been done to find out why.

“They are exposed to pollutants, to air pollution to pesticides, more than an individual who’s not necessarily in the military and we believe that is strongly driving ALS risk,” said Feldman.

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Stephen Goutman, M.D., M.S., Receives ALS Association Grant to Study Environment and Genetics https://www.umich-als.org/stephen-goutman-m-d-m-s-receives-als-association-grant-to-study-environment-and-genetics/ Thu, 31 Oct 2019 17:19:25 +0000 https://www.umich-als.org/?p=1207 An ALS Association grant will help Stephen Goutman, M.D., M.S., associate director of the University of Michigan (U-M) ALS Center of Excellence, answer the most common question asked by patients suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) – “why me?” Dr. Goutman’s research has shown an association between environmental pollutants and ALS development and progression. The new ALS Association funding will allow Dr. Goutman to jointly consider genetic factors and environmental exposures over the next three years.

Stephen Goutman, M.D.

“Our research at the ALS Center of Excellence over the past few years has been building to this detailed examination of the gene-time-environment model,” said Dr. Goutman, who is a U-M associate professor of neurology. “Every person is impacted differently by the environment based on their genes and how their body metabolizes pollutants. We hypothesize that people who have both higher ALS genetic risk and environmental exposures will be shown to have a higher risk of developing ALS and a faster progression of the disease.”

The grant will be co-directed by Kelly Bakulski, Ph.D., U-M assistant professor of epidemiology. By understanding how exposure to pollutants like pesticides and industrial chemicals affects a person’s genes, Drs. Goutman and Bakulski plan to develop new targets for drug treatments. Additionally, their research will likely identify life changes that people can make to reduce their susceptibility to ALS.

Kelly Bakulski, Ph.D.

“Dr. Goutman and I are passionate about defining the links between ALS, the environment and genetics,” said Eva Feldman, M.D., Ph.D., director of the U-M ALS Center of Excellence. “Thanks to the research partnership we have with our patients in the Multidisciplinary ALS Clinic, we already have a great deal of information stored in our biorepository that will help with this new study. I am very excited to see what the results will tell us about why Michigan has the highest prevalence of ALS compared to other states in the US.”

Though the exact causes of ALS are unknown, Drs. Feldman and Goutman’s research published earlier this year in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry showed that legacy organochlorine pesticides and other environmental pollutants advance the progression of the neurodegenerative disease. The study measured pesticide levels in blood samples of ALS patients cared for at the U-M Multidisciplinary ALS Clinic.

In March 2019, the Detroit Free Press reported on ALS environmental risk factors: New study: Michigan’s manufacturing legacy may be affecting our health, environment

Other research from Stephen Goutman, M.D., M.S.:

ALS/SURV: a modification of the CAFS statistic. Goutman SA, Brown MB, Cudkowicz M, Atassi N, Feldman EL. Amyotroph Lateral Scler Frontotemporal Degener. 2019 Nov;20(7-8):576-583. doi: 10.1080/21678421.2019.1643375. Epub 2019 Jul 23. PMID: 31334681

Stem cell treatments for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a critical overview of early phase trials. Goutman SA, Savelieff MG, Sakowski SA, Feldman EL. Expert Opin Investig Drugs. 2019 Jun;28(6):525-543. doi: 10.1080/13543784.2019.1627324. Epub 2019 Jun 12. Review. Erratum in: Expert Opin Ther Pat. 2019 Jul 4;:1-7. PMID: 31189354

High plasma concentrations of organic pollutants negatively impact survival in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Goutman SA, Boss J, Patterson A, Mukherjee B, Batterman S, Feldman EL. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2019 Aug;90(8):907-912. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2018-319785. Epub 2019 Feb 13. PMID: 30760645

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