Global Lyme Alliance (GLA), the nation’s leading nonprofit funder of Lyme and tick-borne disease research and education, announced today that it has awarded a record total of over $1 million in grants to eight researchers focused on post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS) or “chronic” Lyme. “Although GLA’s scientific agenda—the identification, treatment and cure of Lyme and other tick-borne diseases—remains the same, this grant cycle we strove especially to award exceptional researchers advancing the science of post-treatment Lyme,” said Harriet Kotsoris, M.D., GLA’s Chief Scientific Officer. “Even with 21 to 28 days of antibiotic treatment, nearly 20 percent of Lyme patients exhibit persistent and debilitating symptoms such as fatigue and pain. We need to understand why.”
In announcing the new grants, Dr. Kotsoris noted that GLA had received the most grant applications in its history—almost $3 million in funding requests. “While we were pleased to receive so many quality grant applications this year, such a profusion underscores the fact that there are far more scientists competing for grants than there is funding to support them,”she said. “Federal funding of Lyme is, in fact, minuscule, yet the Lyme threat keeps growing. This speaks to the importance of GLA’s critical role in working with private donors to drive advancements in the field.” The resulting GLA 2015-2016 grant portfolio is “outstanding,” Dr. Kotsoris said. “The quality of the proposals and funded grants continues to increase every year.”
The eight grants were awarded to:
“GLA is proud to support the innovative research being conducted by some of the best and brightest men and women in the field today,” said Dr. Kotsoris. “We believe that the exceptionally talented scientists being funded by GLA will greatly contribute to advances in identifying the causes of PTLDS, how to reverse it, and especially how to treat the persistent infection.”
Among the projects being supported by GLA is the first human clinical trial for pain and cognitive impairment in chronic Lyme sufferers. The trial will be conducted at Columbia University under the direction of Dr. Landa. Researchers were selected following a rigorous evaluation process using guidelines established by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Each proposal was evaluated by Grant Review Committee members of GLA’s Scientific Advisory Board and met the same scientific standards that NIH applies to its own grant review process. The resulting 2015-2016 grant awards represent projects judged to have exceptional prospects of delivering measurable advances. Lyme disease is the most common vector-borne disease in the U.S. with some 329,000 new cases reported in the United States each year, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. There are no accurate diagnostic tests for Lyme, no tests to prove that Lyme bacteria are eradicated or that an individual is cured. Some 10 to 20 percent of individuals with Lyme end up with long-term health problems.