The Aneurysm and AVM Foundation is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2019 Cerebrovascular Research Grant Awards. We selected two researchers whose scientific projects showed the greatest potential to improve our understanding of cerebrovascular diseases.
Research Study: Human Genetics and Molecular Mechanisms of Vein of Galen Malformation
Primary Investigator: Kristopher Kahle, MD, PhD., Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery, Pediatrics, and Cellular & Molecular Physiology, Yale School of Medicine; Yale-Rockefeller NIH Center for Mendelian Genomics; Director, Developmental Anomaly Neurosurgery, Yale-New Haven Hospital
Background: Vein of Galen malformation (VOGM) is one of the most common and devastating forms of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in children. Despite advances in treatment in recent years, VOGM still frequently leads to heart failure, cerebral fluid imbalance, bleeding within the brain, and even death among affected children. Beginning in infancy, many children undergo multiple surgeries, scans, and invasive procedures, all of which cause enormous physical, emotional, and financial strain on patients and their families.
Very little is known about the causes of VOGM. This lack of knowledge has hindered the development of new and improved methods to diagnose and treat this disease. These obstacles can be overcome using whole exome sequencing (WES), an approach that has led to unprecedented gene discoveries in other structural brain disorders.
He hypothesizes that mutations in interacting components of an EPHB4 signaling network contribute to VOGM by disrupting RASA1/mTORC1-dependent arteriovenous specification. Furthermore, Dr. Kahle hypothesizes that phenotypic heterogeneity and incomplete penetrance of VOGM and variable expressivity may be explained by the compound effect of inherited germline mutation and with tissue-specific somatic mutations.
Research Objective: The goal of Dr. Kahle’s research is to fill these knowledge gaps using the latest in DNA-sequencing technology. Utilizing the power of social media, Dr. Kahle has connected with and recruited patients from around the globe to participate in his genetic study creating the largest cohort of VOGM patients to date. He expects to expand that VOGM case-parent cohort, more than doubling his initial study. He also expects to screen for known VOGM-associated mutations as well as carry out whole exome sequencing and bio-informatic analysis. Finally, Dr. Kahle expects to analyze somatic vascular tissue from germline-mutant VOGM patients for superimposed somatic mutations.
Outcomes: With funds from The Aneurysm and AVM Foundation, Dr. Kahle believes that his approaches will expand the current understanding of how VOGM develops at the molecular level. He hopes that the resulting advances will improve disease management, surveillance, and genetic counseling, stimulate research into new diagnostic and therapeutic options, and improve social support for patients and families afflicted with VOGM and possibly other brain and systemic AVMs.
Included in Dr. Kahle's award is the Lauren Karafiol Cerebrovascular Research Grant. As part of TAAF's part of annual grant program, this award is made in memory of Lauren P. Karafiol and aims to off-set costs of research in the area of AVMs, the disease that forever changed Lauren's life and that of her family. We are incredibly proud to join Lauren's family in support of novel research of arteriovenous malformations.
Source: Kristopher Kahle, MD, PhD, Yale University School of Medicine. This research summary has been adapted and edited from Dr. Kahle’s research proposal.
Research Study: Patient-specific Genetics of Cerebral Aneurysm Endothelium
Primary Investigator: Michael R. Levitt, MD, Associate Professor of Neurological Surgery and Radiology, University of Washington. Dr. Levitt holds several other titles with UW, chiefly Scientific Director of the Stroke and Applied Neuroscience Center.
Background: Cerebral aneurysm formation, growth and rupture occur as a result of forces of blood flow on the endothelial cells that line the arteries in the brain. These forces, called “hemodynamic stresses,” can be calculated from computer simulations, but their effects on endothelial cells cannot be determined in actual patients. In fact, a major drawback of existing CFD (computational fluid dynamics) studies in clinical applications (such as risk of aneurysm growth or rupture, or outcome of aneurysm treatment) is that they do not directly measure the pathological effects of hemodynamic variables on biological tissue. Rather they inferred from a variety of sources such as animal studies and in vitro experiments. The current state of the art cannot provide clinicians with the ability to measure the cellular response of the cerebrovascular endothelium to hemodynamic stress in a specific patient’s cerebral aneurysm, which is a significant gap in knowledge.
To address this critical knowledge gap, and to better characterize the effect of hemodynamic stress on aneurysm endothelial cells, Dr. Levitt’s research will use 3D-printed models of patient’s cerebral aneurysms, which are coated with living human endothelial cells and exposed to hemodynamic stress. The genetic and protein response of these cells to different amounts of hemodynamic stress will be measured.
Research Objective: The goal of Dr. Levitt’s research is to further our understanding of the patient-specific hemodynamic, genetic, and proteomic factors that contribute to aneurysm formation, growth, rupture, and healing thus informing treatment decision-making and improving the quality of life for patients suffering from intracranial aneurysms.
Outcomes: With funds from The Aneurysm and AVM Foundation, Dr. Levitt believes that his translational approach bridges the gap between computational fluid dynamics and vascular biology and intends to produce a quantified reference database of endothelial expression of key vascular factors in response to differential levels of hemodynamic stress. The output of this proposal can then be applied to future CFD simulations of aneurysms and permit an informed estimate of the endothelial response to a given level of hemodynamic stress. Dr. Levitt believes these findings will link computer simulations with actual endothelial cell activity, which will allow clinicians to better predict aneurysm risk, and develop new treatments such as gene therapy and targeted drugs to treat cerebral aneurysms without surgery.
Source: Michel R. Levitt, MD, University of Washington. This research summary has been adapted and edited from Dr. Levitt’s research proposal.