RUNX1

By Steven Libowitz   |   June 20, 2024
Monica and Tim Babich with the RRP Team outside of their offices in Santa Barbara (courtesy photo)

The RUNX1 gene provides instructions for making RUNX1 protein, which plays a vital role in the production of blood stem cells and the maintenance of a healthy blood system throughout life. RUNX1-FPD patients have a hereditary mutation that causes symptoms such as bleeding and easy bruising, which can require limiting daily activities and cause allergic conditions and autoimmune diseases. But far more significantly, RUNX1-FPD greatly increases the risk of developing blood cancers, predisposes patients to leukemia and lymphoma at a rate of up to 50 percent over their lifetime. 

RUNX1 Familial Platelet Disorder is a very rare disease. It’s estimated that just 20,000 people across the entire nation have the condition. But for Montecito couple and Crane School parents Tim and Monica Babich, the numbers don’t matter, as both Tim and their eldest son, now 13, both have the disorder. In fact, it was the discovery that the boy also had the inherited disease that spurred the high-powered couple – who moved to Montecito from London to slow down from stressful careers in finance, consulting, and management – to found a nonprofit to confront the situation. 

The RUNX1 Research Program (RRP) was created to increase awareness of the blood disorder, support patients and physicians in diagnosing the disease, and, perhaps most importantly, to coordinate research into finding solutions in an area – cancer prevention – that is severely underfunded.

“Our main goal is to prevent cancer, and that’s what our research focuses on,” said Alex Gonzalez, the organization’s Director of Development. “We’re trying to stop it before it even starts, because once an individual has a cancer such as leukemia, there are only a few therapies available, and they’ve already transformed. So we’re trying to get ahead of it for folks who have this mutation to stop it before it starts.”

In its goal to blaze a path to transform scientific discoveries from the lab into tangible treatments for patients and their doctors as quickly as possible, RUNX1 Research Program has already launched two clinical trials with two more on the way, just seven years after the nonprofit was founded. The key has been to focus its cancer prevention discovery model on drug repurposing strategy, knowing that developing novel therapies costs billions and takes close to 15 years, with a failure rate of more than 90 percent. For a rare disease like RUNX1-FPD – with both an active patient community and an extreme sense of urgency – RRP needed to implement alternative paths to discovering treatments. The nonprofit’s current trials are testing existing medicines, often those that are cheaper generic versions, that can help make treatments more accessible to people everywhere. 

RRP funded 24 research projects that either tested existing medicines or found specific cell problems due to RUNX1 mutations that could be treated with an existing medicine. As a result of these efforts, two drugs – Imatinib and Sirolimus – have moved from the bench to bedside within the last 12 months, while two additional drugs – Etanercept and Ruxolitinib – have emerged as potential treatment candidates.

RRP Funded Researcher Dr. Alexander Bick, Vanderbilt University, in his lab (courtesy photo)

“Because the drugs have already been approved by the FDA, we have immediate availability,” Gonzalez explained. “That also greatly lowers the risk of unexpected side effects. And repurposing can provide new treatment options for diseases and also enhance understanding of disease mechanisms and drug actions in general.” 

Meanwhile, RUNX1-FPD still remains widely unknown, which is why the organization’s work also includes educating both the public and physicians, Gonzalez said. 

“The disease is often underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed for many years. Unfortunately, oftentimes it’s only when someone has already developed blood cancer that they get the genetic testing and find out that they have RUNX1-FPD. Some catch it earlier because, since it’s a generational disease, if there’s blood cancer in their family history, they will get tested and diagnosed that way. But many physicians don’t even consider this disorder.” 

The nonprofit is committed to providing medical education to clinicians, including information on what tests to administer so that individuals walking around with inherited blood disorders that increase their risk of blood cancer can get the appropriate diagnosis.

“We have a whole medical education series to explain why it’s important to analyze inherited genetic information in patients with blood cancers, to emphasize how common harmful and inherited genetic changes are in patients with blood cancers, and showing the risks of missing or incorrect diagnoses and how they affect patient health,” Gonzalez explained. 

RRP also works directly with patients, providing multiple avenues for them to become involved as advocates and experts, such as the Research Guided by Patient Committee (RGPC). 

“We place a priority on understanding their diagnostic journey, offer opportunities for peer-to-peer support, continuously develop useful educational tools and encourage engagement in co-designing research,” Gonzalez said. 

While RRP has been remarkably efficient and moving forward, expanding its programs requires additional funding. What’s important to remember, he said, is that supporting RRP’s efforts is an investment in cancer prevention research – the discovery of a blood cancer prevention therapy would not only impact RUNX1-FPD patients but could also pave the way for blood cancer prevention in other high-risk populations in the general public. 

“Historically, there haven’t been a lot of funds going towards cancer prevention, catching cancer and stopping it before it starts,” Gonzalez said. “Investing in our organization would not only have an impact on this patient population and other familiar blood disorders, but also enhance discovery of a prevention cancer therapy for a lot of other diseases.”  

 

RUNX1 Research Program

Donate now!

www.runx1-fpd.org
(916) 212-0410
Director of Development : Alex Gonzalez

Mission

To improve the quality of life and prevent cancer in patients with RUNX1-FPD. We do this by promoting awareness and funding world-class collaborative research with an empowered patient community. 

Begin to Build a Relationship

We know you care about where your money goes and how it is used. Connect with this organization’s leadership in order to begin to build this important relationship. Your email will be sent directly to this organization’s Director of Development and/or Executive Director.

Before we started the RUNX1 Research Program, we didn’t know of anyone else having RUNX1-FPD beyond our family – but we knew others like us were out there, waiting to be found. Over the past six years, we’ve had over 300 patients join our community from across the world, and we know there are so many more. We are proud that RRP has granted over $11M to support 31 research projects towards finding a cure to benefit all our families.
Monica Babich, RRP co-founder, wife and mother of patients

Stop Cancer in Its Tracks

As part of their mission to stop cancer in its tracks, all donations to the RUNX1 Research Program fund cancer prevention initiatives – a mission that has never been more important. Medical professionals predict that, in the next year, cancer will become the number one cause of death in the United States. Your donations to the RUNX1 Research Program will fund research at the forefront of cancer detection and intervention. By studying the earliest signs of cancer today, we can prevent a fatal diagnosis tomorrow.

Key Supporters

Tim and Monica Babich
Georgetta and Charles Blackburn
Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation
The Edward P. Evans Foundation
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society
Mark Foundation for Cancer Research
NeoGenomics