Update from the Windsor Castle Research Event (Action For ME)

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Senior Member (Voting Rights)
From AfME’s website:
On 3-4 March, Action for ME hosted a research event at Windsor Castle that bought together 27 international experts from different sectors. The event was made possible by a private donor and held in partnership with St George’s House, Windsor. Action for ME’s CEO, Sonya, is a fellow of the House.

You can read the full summary of the Windsor event here, which includes next steps and a list of attendees.

Opportunities for collaboration in ME research remain very limited and this event created a rare space for open discussion at a key moment: DecodeME is nearing completion and long Covid research is growing. Yet people with ME are still waiting for real progress. Urgent action is needed to respond to the growing number of people affected.

Discussions focussed on genetics, diagnosis and developing treatments, reflecting our work in the Genetics Centre of Excellence and new findings from the DecodeME and LOCOME studies.

The event enabled new connections and partnerships to be formed, and built a shared commitment to improving the quality and impact of research for ME and long Covid.

The full summary is worth a read to understand the purpose and who was there. Looks like a useful bit of bringing people together and networking.
 
Oh to be a fly on that wall

'While biological understanding of ME is still limited, planning for the future is essential. This includes
preparing for the delivery of potential treatments, as identified by the ME Priority Setting
Partnership.'

So many questions that can't currently be answered. Do they mean it is limited with the new genetic data or now while it is unpublished? It's interesting that they are already talking about delivery of treatments, I wonder if that's just general talk or whether there are ideas on what could work from DecodeME and other unpublished studies.

Interesting to see Alain Moreau there. I watched an interesting interview with him yesterday about his work. He seems to think he has identified an MiRNA biomarker that explains female predominance and is a drug target for around 50% of pwME iirc. I should start a thread if I have the spoons. Glad to see Danny Altmann there too as he seems to shy away from talking about MECFS when he presents on Long Covid.

Very glad this event happened, as it is precisely the sort of thing we need to push the field forward.
 
Glad to see Danny Altmann there too as he seems to shy away from talking about MECFS when he presents on Long Covid.

Maybe not any more. From the minutes of the APPG on ME and Long Covid last month:

DA discussed the ongoing impact of Long Covid and ME/CFS on millions of people in the
UK, with associated annual economic drag running into billions. He emphasised the need to
understand the pathophysiology of these conditions, which he believes can be addressed
with proper research.

 
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