Every quarter, SynGAP Research Fund (SRF) and our partner organizations in the Syngap Global Network (SGN) tally up the newly diagnosed patients in our respective regions and come up with a global count. Today, the census stands at 1,238 patients, an increase of 23 from last quarter.
This is the total number of people diagnosed with SYNGAP1 known to SYNGAP1 patient advocacy organizations and family support groups worldwide. It’s not the number of people in SYNGAP1 registries and it’s not the number of variants associated with the SYNGAP1 gene – multiple people can have the same variant. We do not include benign, likely benign variants, or Variants of Unknown Significance (VUS) without an accompanying clinical diagnosis. The summary census data is available in this Google Sheet.
It is crucial to identify all those with SYNGAP1 so we can reach out and recruit more people into natural history studies such as SRF’s major collaboration with Invitae. It’s also a benchmark of how highly SGN patient organizations are engaged with the patient population they represent.
It is also critical to convince industry that we have enough patients to justify their investment:
“I think there are many in industry who are actually looking for a condition with say, a population of a thousand or more individuals. And that there is a reasonably clear playbook for approaching folks in industry and with coupling the right science with the right commercialization partners there’s a relatively clear playbook for advancing those relatively quickly in the matter of a few years.” - Dr Timothy Yu, Simons Searchlight conference, August 2021
Every new diagnosis proves that there are still more out there to be found. SRF and SGN are determined to find them all. One of the most powerful things you can do as parents, caregivers, and siblings is to share stories. You can introduce your loved one via SRF’s Warrior Wednesday. If you have more to share, feel free to write about it - contact Kelli or Ed to share pieces of your life with the community. Both are great ways to get your voice heard and connect with others who know what you’re going through. If you’re part of an under-represented community or live in a country with a low diagnosis rate, please get in touch with us so we can help tell your story!