The Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1998 by co-chairmen Leonard A. Lauder and Ronald S. Lauder of the Estée Lauder Companies cosmetics family and led by Howard Fillit, a geriatrician and neuroscientist. Isobel Coleman serves as the organization's Chief Executive Officer. The ADDF provides funding to scientists who are conducting promising, innovative Alzheimer's disease drug research worldwide. The ADDF funds early-stage research and early-phase clinical trials that might otherwise go unfunded. By supporting research projects around the world, it seeks to increase the chances of finding treatments for Alzheimer's disease, related dementias and cognitive aging. The ADDF has invested nearly $65 million to fund some 450 Alzheimer's drug discovery programs and clinical trials in academic centers and biotechnology companies in 18 countries.
The ADDF is a biomedical venture philanthropy. Many of its grants are structured as investments, providing a return that is reinvested in new drug research. After initial ADDF funding, grantees have received commitments of over $2 billion in follow-on funding from government, pharmaceutical companies and venture capital firms to further advance drug research.
Through its programs, the ADDF has invested close to $65 million to fund nearly 450 Alzheimer's drug discovery programs and clinical trials in academic centers and biotechnology companies in 18 countries. From 2000 to 2004, the ADDF provided seed funding for Amyvid, the first FDA-approved diagnostic test for Alzheimer's disease. The ADDF also funded PrecivityAD, the first blood test to help diagnose Alzheimer's disease.
The ADDF partners with family foundations, government, non-profit organization, the pharmaceutical industry and corporate organizations to leverage collective funding power.
The ADDF sponsors a number of scientific conferences, including the International Conference on Alzheimer's and ParkinsonâÂÂs Disease (AD/PD), the Clinical Trials on AlzheimerâÂÂs Disease conference (CTAD), and the World Dementia Council Summit. The ADDF also organizes advisory panels focused on key issues surrounding drug discovery and development for Alzheimer's.
The ADDF's microsite, Cognitive Vitality, provide evidence-based answers to pressing questions about healthy brain aging. Resources include:
The Melvin R. Goodes Prize for Excellence in Drug Development, also known simply as the Goodes Prize, was first awarded in 2015. It is awarded annually by the AlzheimerâÂÂs Drug Discovery Foundation for innovations in research that have made a significant and lasting impact in the AlzheimerâÂÂs field. Recipients receive an engraved medal and a monetary award of $150,000 to support their continued research in AlzheimerâÂÂs therapeutics, biomarkers, or prevention programs.
The award is named in honor of Melvin R. Goodes, a former Chairman and Chief Executive of Warner-Lambert. Goodes established the prize with his wife, Nancy, and in partnership with the AlzheimerâÂÂs Drug Discovery Foundation after his own diagnosis with AlzheimerâÂÂs disease in 2009.
Every year, the ADDF hosts a series of events to raise awareness and funds to support Alzheimer's research and drug development. They include: