The Michael J. Fox Foundation Annual Report 2016 – Frameworks for Progress | Page 6

“The Michael J. Fox Foundation, almost singlehandedly, has catapulted… research.” —BioWorld Today, October 2016 When a promising target demonstrates sustained potential to benefit people with Parkinson’s, we move quickly to coordinate an entire field of activity in support of its continued forward movement. We tackle roadblocks head-on, providing researchers with resources to generate data and build the case for high-impact ideas, and sophisticated tools that can help science move through testing and toward regulatory approval faster. This includes characterizing molecular biology, developing strategies to objectively measure pathology and treatment effects, assembling patient cohorts, and creating technology infrastructure to gather and analyze “big data” for use by researchers in MJFF-led and independent studies. And, it’s clear that our Foundation’s “de-risking” method — a critical 4 The Michael J. Fox Foundation framework for progress — is working. Today, several symptomatic therapies for motor and non-motor symptoms are in Phase III clinical testing, with one or more expected to file for FDA approval within the calendar year; compare that to the PD landscape as recently as 2011, when not a single Parkinson’s therapy was being tested in late-stage clinical trials. And there are no fewer than nine disease- modifying therapies advancing through clinical testing that could slow, stop or even reverse progression of PD — something no current treatment is proven to do. This progress is set against the backdrop of a new era of patient power, with a seismic opportunity for patients to partner with scientists to influence research design and outcomes. Whether volunteering for traditional or virtual clinical trials,