Community Corner

DART To The Finish Charity Walk Set For Sept. 25

The fourth annual charity event to benefit Dana's Angels Research Trust will take place at Greenwich Point Park and virtually on Sept. 25.

GREENWICH, CT — The fourth annual DART to the Finish charity walk to benefit Dana's Angels Research Trust (DART) will take place on Sept. 25, and will be held in-person at Greenwich Point Park and virtually online.

DART is a Greenwich-based nonprofit that funds research for the rare childhood disease, Niemann-Pick type C (NPC), which is often referred to as children’s Alzheimer’s. Registration (which is a tax-deductible donation to DART) is $25 for adults and $10 for children ages 10 to 21 years of age. Registered walkers receive a DART to the Finish t-shirt and are eligible for gift certificate rewards when they refer other friends and family members to sign up.

Go to the DART website to learn more and register.

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DART was founded by Andrea and Phil Marella of Greenwich after two of their four children, Dana and Andrew, were diagnosed with NPC. Dana sadly passed away in 2013 at age 19, but Andrew, who turned 22 in June, is doing better due to being enrolled in a clinical trial to slow the progression of the disease.

According to a news release, NPC is so rare that only about 200 children in the U.S. have been diagnosed with the disease, and only a few, including Andrew, live in Connecticut.

Find out what's happening in Greenwichfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“The need for funding crucial NPC treatments and research has never been more important than it is today,” said Phil Marella in a news release. “The NPC community was stunned earlier this year when Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals suddenly abandoned the Adrabetadex clinical trial, of which our son Andrew and other NPC children have been a part of for more than seven years.

"Fortunately, in June 2021, the court approved the sale of Adrabetadex to Mandos, LLC, which will allow the medication to continue to be used in the clinical trial. We have seen first-hand the results of this medication with Andrew and the other NPC children in the trial. We know how important it is to continue access to it and other treatments and to work with the FDA on approving potential treatments that can save these children’s lives.”

It is the hope of the NPC community families, including the Marellas, Andrews and Parseghians, that other families will not have to go through the lengthy, complex journey to find a diagnosis, and that treatments and cures can be accelerated.

"NPC is a brutal disease," added Phil Marella in a news release. "It impacts neurological and motor functions in young children and is caused by a malfunction in the way the body stores and processes cholesterol. While this disease has impacted our family for 20 years, we have only seen promising progress in treatment options in the past ten years — specifically a clinical trial that our son Andrew is enrolled in that has helped him deal with the devastating impact of the disease.”

Andrea Marella added, “This clinical trial and other research into NPC is made possible only through the generous donations of our friends, community and sponsors. Holding the DART to the Finish charity walk is our way of doing something fun and raising much-needed funds at the same time.”

To date, DART has raised $5.5 million that has gone toward the search for a better treatment and ultimately a cure for NPC. DART is particularly proud of its commitment as a founding member of a unique, collaborative drug development program called SOAR-NPC or Support Of Accelerated Research. Working with other NPC families and research institutions, SOAR’s collaborators have four clinical trials already to their credit.

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