Patient Stories
Some experienced kidney failure in their 20s… others in their 70s. All of them experienced a gradual decline in kidney functioning over many years, just like one or more family members before them.
Learn how these families discovered that their family history of chronic kidney disease was the result of MUC1 or UMOD and how they are faring.
A Story of Three Sisters, By Sally Harrison
Currently, there is no cure or treatment for MUC1. Failing kidneys lead to dialysis and then to transplant. At the Autosomal Dominant Tubulointerstitial Kidney Disease (ADTKD) Family Day in Winston Salem in September, a TED talk by Dr. Anna Greka presented the advances that are being made at the Broad Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a research organization of MIT and Harvard. With the advances being made, transplant as the only solution to kidney failure may change sooner rather than later.
Richard R. Nelson, Chair & Co-founder Rare Kidney Disease Foundation
Richard founded the Rare Kidney Disease Foundation (RKDF) in 2018 to expand awareness to find the estimated tens of thousands of undiagnosed patients in the U.S., build a strong patient and medical team community, and advocate for ADTKD patients and families.
My Family’s Experience with MUC-1, by Carla (Charley) White
I am very grateful to Dr. Anthony Bleyer and his team at Wake Forest School of Medicine who also partner with the medical staff at MIT's Broad Institute for their dedication and hard work in isolating this gene. We now have answers to this baffling disease, which provides hope to all of us who are affected by these rare kidney diseases.
My Experience with MUC1 - by Christine Hernandez
My goal is that through Dr. Bleyer’s research, there will be some kind of treatment that can halt or delay the progression of my children’s disease and help maintain a healthy kidney function, and as a result, a healthy family life.