NUMBERS HAVE POWER.
JOIN THE REGISTRY.
ADVANCE THE SCIENCE.
Together we can find a cure for ftd
The FTD Disorders Registry is a powerful tool in the movement to create therapies and find a cure. Together we can help change the course of the disease and put an end to FTD.
Your privacy is important! We promise to protect it. We will not share your contact information.
The Registry is an online database that collects information from those affected by all types of frontotemporal degeneration (FTD):
Persons diagnosed, current and former caregivers, family, and friends can join. As a member of the Registry, you can help us advance the science and move faster toward finding treatments and cures. The first step is simple:
NUMBERS HAVE POWER.
JOIN THE REGISTRY.
ADVANCE THE SCIENCE.
NUMBERS HAVE POWER.
JOIN THE REGISTRY.
ADVANCE THE SCIENCE.
Together we can find a cure for ftd
The FTD Disorders Registry is a powerful tool in the movement to create therapies and find a cure. Together we can help change the course of the disease and put an end to FTD.
Your privacy is important! We promise to protect it. We will not share your contact information.
The Registry is an online database that collects information from those affected by all types of frontotemporal degeneration (FTD):
Persons diagnosed, current and former caregivers, family, and friends can join. As a member of the Registry, you can help us advance the science and move faster toward finding treatments and cures. The first step is simple:
AND NOW WE WORK TOGETHER >
Will you join the community working to end FTD?
UPDATES
How Caregiver Burden Affects Research Participation
Caring for a loved one with FTD can make research participation feel impossible. Learn more about the barriers caregivers face and how researchers can make studies more accessible.
From Surveys to Science: How Registry Data Becomes Research
Every survey response in the Registry Research Study helps turn lived experience into research data that drives discovery.
Get Ready for World FTD Awareness Week
World FTD Awareness Week is September 21-27, 2025.
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Registry Data Presented at the NEALS Consortium
Registry data is helping to bridge the gap between the FTD and ALS research communities and to accelerate recruitment for future clinical trials.
What the Registry Community Is Most Interested In
Registry data reveal which FTD subtypes and genes have the highest representation of research-ready participants, helping scientists design stronger, more focused studies.
Registry Data Presented at the NEALS Consortium
Registry data is helping to bridge the gap between the FTD and ALS research communities and to accelerate recruitment for future clinical trials.
THE FTD REGISTRY IS A PARTNERSHIP OF: