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Healthy Aging

Weston Family Foundation funds translational research sparking new innovations for neurodegenerative diseases of aging.

January 19, 2026

Toronto, ON – January 20, 2026 

 Rapid Response program provides seed funding to identify and validate novel, high-risk, high-reward solutions for neurodegenerative diseases of aging (NDAs) that exhibit a high-potential to enhance patient outcomes and quality of life in a real-world context.

As we kick off the new Rapid Response 2026 funding cycle during Alzheimer’s Awareness Month, we want to recognize our Rapid Response 2025 grantee recipients whose significant research have contributed toward developing strategies to delay the onset or slow the progression of NDAs.

 It is our pleasure to announce the seven 2025 Rapid Response 2025 grantees:


Etienne de Villers-Sidani, MD FRCP(C) 

McGill University 

Project name: Development and validation of a digital biomarker-based tool for the early screening and monitoring of Alzheimer’s Disease 

Monitoring Alzheimer’s disease (AD) progression remains difficult because current assessments rely on lengthy, subjective, in-clinic interviews and cognitive tests. These tools are time-consuming, costly, and poorly suited for frequent monitoring or large-scale studies. Dr. de Villers-Sidani’s project addresses this challenge by developing and validating ETNA™-AD, a mobile, camera-based eye-tracking tool that provides objective estimates of cognitive function and disease severity. Running on an iPad Pro, ETNA™-AD guides patients through brief oculomotor tasks and uses machine-learning models to extract disease-relevant eye-movement signatures. Preliminary data in AD, as well as prior work in multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease, show that these markers reliably reflect clinical scales such as CDR and MMSE. If successful, ETNA™-AD will deliver a fast, low-cost, and scalable method for tracking neurodegenerative disease progression. Its ability to generate standardized, quantitative endpoints remotely could transform clinical care, enable more inclusive monitoring, and accelerate therapeutic development for Alzheimer’s and related age-associated neurodegenerative disorders. 

Carmela Tartaglia, MD, FRCPC 

University Health Network 

Project name: Bringing precision medicine to neurodegenerative disease 

Patients with neurodegenerative diseases exhibit substantial molecular heterogeneity driven by distinct and often overlapping patterns of protein misfolding, aggregation, and spread. Co-occurring proteinopathies are the rule rather than the exception limiting the traditional one-size-fits-all therapeutic approaches. Although many treatments have targeted single pathologies, growing evidence indicates that this approach is often insufficient for meaningful disease modification. The field is therefore shifting toward precision medicine that aligns treatment with an individual’s molecular profile. Dr. Tartaglia proposes a precision medicine strategy using Seed Amplification Assays (SAAs), a sensitive and scalable method for detecting misfolded protein seeds from accessible biospecimens. Using SAAs as a high-throughput screen enables us to identify each patient’s unique combination of proteinopathies and use this molecular ‘fingerprint’ to guide patient-tailored therapeutic strategies. Such an approach would create a path toward a new framework for personalized drug discovery and therapeutic matching in neurodegenerative diseases. Instead of designing therapies around a singular, presumed driver of disease, treatment could be directed toward the actual co-pathologies identified in each individual. In turn, this may allow for simultaneous targeting of multiple proteinopathies, either through combination therapies, multi-target agents, or biologics designed to address specific misfolded species revealed by SAAs. 

Cheryl Wellington, PhD 

University of British Columbia 

Project name: Generation of Canadian reference intervals for plasma phosphorylated tau-217 

Dr. Wellington’s project aims to understand how the levels of an important blood biomarker called phosphorylated tau 217 (p-tau-217) could be the most promising diagnostic biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In order to determine what an abnormal test result looks like, one first needs to understand what the normal levels are in the Canadian population. Dr. Wellington’s project will leverage a representative valid sample of Canadians to determine what normal levels of p-tau-217 are in the Canadian population. Her and her team will measure p-tau-217 levels in approximately 2500 samples, providing an unprecedented base of how p-tau-217 levels change during aging. P-tau-217 is the best plasma test to confirm a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease and our study will help to launch p-tau-217 testing in Canada. In addition to clinical application in confirming an AD diagnosis and establishing eligibility to receive Lecanemab, our study will also serve as a foundation of knowledge for many more research studies on whether p-tau-217 can be used to determine how quickly a patient will progress, whether common comorbidities of aging such as cardiovascular disease affect p-tau-217 levels, and many other questions.  

Stuart Fogel, PhD 

University of Ottawa 

Project name: Targeted enhancement of sleep to restore sleep-dependent memory consolidation in prodromal dementia  

Changes in sleep are the earliest indicator of age-related cognitive decline and have been identified as one of the best potential modifiable and yet-to-be-exploited targets for prevention of dementia. Dr. Fogel’s previous work has identified potential, yet unexplored, therapeutic targets during sleep. He and his team will enhance sleep by targeting these markers using natural health products, with the aim of restoring the boost that sleep affords to memory processing. If successful, this research will provide proof-of-concept for the use of therapeutics to restore the benefit of sleep for memory and cognition at the earliest stages of cognitive decline. This will lead to the development of targeted interventions during sleep meant to alter the trajectory of age-related cognitive decline that occur in neurodegenerative diseases of aging. 

Philippe Huot, MD, PhD

McGill University

Project name: Characterization of novel GlyT1 inhibitors for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease 

Parkinson’s disease is characterized by motor symptoms such as tremor, stiffness and slowness of movement. Levodopa is the most effective treatment for Parkinson’s disease, but its use is often complicated by the occurrence of uncontrollable abnormal involuntary movements, referred to as dyskinesia, as well as a shorter duration of symptom relief, referred to as fluctuations. In experimental models of Parkinson’s disease, we have discovered that increasing the levels of the amino acid glycine in the brain diminishes the severity of dyskinesia. However, most glycine-enhancing drugs face hurdles that prevent their development for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. In this project, Dr. Huot proposes to determine the effect of novel glycine enhancers on the severity of dyskinesia and motor symptoms, in an experimental model of Parkinson’s disease. He and his team will also determine what concentrations of the drug in the blood are associated with a reduction of dyskinesia and improvement of motor symptoms. Together, this data will inform what doses should be investigated in future clinical trials of patients with Parkinson’s disease. 

Amanpreet Badhwar, PhD 

Research Centre of the Institut universitaire de gériatrie de Montréal (CRIUGM) 

Project name: Translational Integration of Blood-Based Biomarkers and Virtual Reality Cognitive Testing for Enhanced Subtyping of Subjective Cognitive Decline 

As people age, many begin to notice subtle memory changes. When these concerns occur but standard memory tests still look “normal,” the condition is called Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD). Although often overlooked in the clinic, SCD can be an early warning sign for future memory problems, including mild cognitive impairment or dementia. Unfortunately, today’s tools are not sensitive enough to identify who is truly at risk. Dr. Badhwar’s project aims to change that by developing a more accurate way to assess early cognitive decline. Her and her team will combine two innovative approaches: a virtual-reality (VR) memory test that can detect subtle changes in how people remember and organize information; and a blood test measuring a panel of 30 proteins linked in previous studies to early changes in the brain before overt symptoms of dementia appear. Dr. Badhwar and her team will then use machine learning to see which combination of VR performance and blood proteins best predicts who has more significant memory concerns and who will be most likely to progress to mild cognitive impairment in years to come. By developing a sensitive and scalable assessment tool, this project aims to improve early detection and help identify individuals who may benefit most from early intervention or monitoring. 

Peter St George-Hyslop, MD 

University of Toronto 

Project nameAntisense oligonucleotide-mediated therapeutic knockdown of the ABI3 Alzheimer risk gene 

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) remains a major cause of dementia worldwide, driven by accumulation of misfolded proteins and chronic neuroinflammation. As the pathology advances, resident immune cells of the brain, microglia, which mediate the clearance of toxic misfolded protein deposits, become dysfunctional. Existing anti-amyloid therapies provide only modest benefit, underscoring the need for novel approaches targeting other aspects of the disease such as microglial dysfunction. Dr. St George-Hyslop’s project targets ABI3, an AD-associated microglial protein implicated in immune cell functions. Genetic studies in AD mouse models show that loss of ABI3 markedly enhances microglial phagocytosis of amyloid and attenuates disease progression without detectable adverse effects. Building on these findings, the project will use antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) as a clinically validated gene-modulating approach to selectively reduce ABI3 expression in microglia. The work will define the safety profile, optimal dosing parameters, and therapeutic window of ABI3-ASO treatment in vivo before and after onset of pathology. If successful, this program will establish proof-of-concept for ABI3-directed microglial modulation as a disease-modifying strategy. Enhancing microglial function has the potential to slow down or prevent AD progression and could extend to other neurodegenerative diseases of aging in which innate immunity plays a central mechanistic role.