Global call to action to tackle world’s leading cause of death – News – The University of Sydney

Posted: Published on April 27th, 2021

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

Much like weve seen with COVID-19, were calling for the global mobilization of researchers, clinicians, industry leaders and policymakers to accelerate discovery, translation and impact in CVD medicine

Professor Figtree

Professor Gemma Figtreefrom the University of Sydney,Professor Rebecca Ritchiefrom the Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences (MIPS) and La Trobe University'sProfessor Grant Drummondwho leads the La Trobe Centre for Cardiovascular Biology and Disease Research, have led the call to action through their shared affiliation with theAustralian Cardiovascular Alliance (ACvA)- Australias peak leadership body for the advancement of heart, stroke and vascular disease research.

University of Sydney andKolling Institute's Professor Figtree, who is also President of the ACvA, said: As we continue to wrestle with the immense challenge of implementing equitable access to established evidence-based treatments for CVD, substantial gaps remain - particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

Much like weve seen with COVID-19, were calling for the global mobilization of researchers, clinicians, industry leaders and policymakers to accelerate discovery, translation and impact in CVD medicine.

Professor Rebecca Ritchie,Drug Discovery Biology Theme Leader at MIPS said: Developing a global approach to transform drug discovery for cardiovascular disease, whilst maintaining efforts towards equitable access to established effective treatments, is an imperative not an option.

Since the start of the pandemic, the extent of collaboration between researchers, industry, government and the community has been unprecedented - lets continue the momentum applied to address COVID-19 and commit to taking similar steps in the fight against CVD, the worlds biggest killer.

The authors have outlined the most urgent challenges and potential solutions for accelerating drug discovery and translation in the cardiovascular space, along with the next steps required to drive global collaboration to tackle CVD drug solutions.

The international roundtable identified a number of priority areas across how patients are classified beyond the traditional risk factors such as high blood pressure and cholesterol, smoking, lack of physical activity, obesity and comorbidities such as diabetes, for cardiovascular disease. Using this as a platform to discover new biological mechanisms that cause diseases such as heart attack and heart failure and hinder recovery and quality of life, the authors recommend then targeting these mechanisms to develop precision (personalised) medicine for affected patients.

The plan is to establish collaborative preclinical and clinical trial networks to enable faster development of new treatments for cardiovascular disease. Together, the international team is now working on progressing these priority areas, engaging with industry, regulatory bodies, governments and the community on a global scale, said Professor Ritchie.

To read the full article visit theEuropean Heart JournalorCirculation.

Link:
Global call to action to tackle world's leading cause of death - News - The University of Sydney

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