Takeda Canada has co-sponsored the Canadian Inflammatory Bowel Disease Research Consortium (CIRC) PIONEER Grant to boost clinical research efforts.

The company contributed C$500,000 ($356,932) of the C$1m grant, which aims to support high-quality clinical research in the country to enhance patient outcomes and quality of life for those with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

This year, Dr Kevan Jacobson and Dr Genelle Lunken from BC Children’s Hospital received the PIONEER Grant for their research on the study of dietary intervention in Crohn’s disease patients.

The study is titled ‘Open Label Multicentre Randomised Dietary Intervention Study in Paediatric Crohn’s Disease Patients Initiating Anti-TNF Therapy (DISPENSE-T).’

At present, CIRC is running nine multi-centre, investigator-initiated trials, including four multi-centred randomised controlled trials, to address critical clinical questions in IBD management.

Takeda Canada general manager Vatro Mateljic said: “At Takeda, we remain deeply committed to advancing scientific research in IBD and are honoured to continue our support through the CIRC PIONEER Grant.

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“We congratulate Dr Jacobson and Dr Lunken for their innovative project that could significantly impact the lives of children living with IBD.”

The main forms of IBD are Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). It causes chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.

This condition affects more than 322,000 Canadians, and despite ongoing research, there is still no cure.

CIRC president and McGill University gastroenterologist Dr Talat Bessissow said: “The PIONEER Grant exemplifies our commitment to advancing high-quality scientific research through collaboration. This study holds the potential to yield transformative insights and set new standards in IBD care, thanks to our Canadian investigators.”

In June, Takeda announced positive outcomes from its Phase IIb clinical trial of mezagitamab (TAK-079) for treating primary immune thrombocytopenia (ITP).