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Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada and Children’s Hospital at LHSC launch landmark research program to advance care in rare childhood bone disorders

One-year anniversary of affiliation marked by national expansion in research and care for kids with complex conditions

MONTREAL and LONDON, Ontario, Nov. 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- One year after announcing a groundbreaking affiliation agreement, Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada and Children’s Hospital at London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC) are proud to announce a joint, pan-Canadian research initiative targeting rare childhood bone disorders.

In August of 2024, the two institutions announced a groundbreaking five-year funding investment through collaboration with Shriners Children’s and Children’s Health Foundation. Following a competitive internal grant competition, the grant will support the Skeletal Tracking to Accelerate Research (STAR) Program, which is an ambitious effort to uncover the mechanisms behind rare bone diseases and to improve care for children across Canada. The STAR Program will be supported by a $400,000 joint research grant to be funded over two years.

“This collaboration has shown us the power of what’s possible when two institutions with shared values and complementary expertise come together,” said Dr. René St-Arnaud, Director of Research at Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada. “We are proud to move forward with this first joint research program, which will serve children with some of the most complex and underserved bone conditions.”

Co-led by Dr. Leanne Ward (Children’s Hospital) and Dr. Frank Rauch (Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada), the STAR Program reflects the vision laid out in the 2024 affiliation agreement to expand access to specialized pediatric musculoskeletal care and research through strategic partnerships.

“We’ve designed this program to bring researchers and clinicians together in a way that directly responds to what families are telling us they need,” said Dr. Leanne Ward, Paediatric Endocrinologist at Children’s Hospital at LHSC and Researcher at Children’s Health Research Institute (CHRI), a program of London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute (LHSCRI). “The STAR Program gives us the ability to study real-world patient challenges and move faster toward solutions that will make a difference in their care.”

The STAR Program is built around three pillars:

  • The STAR Clinical Registry, a database to track and better understand the mechanisms and evolution of rare bone conditions in children, including genetic forms of rickets, skeletal dysplasias like achondroplasia, and bone fragility conditions (e.g. osteogenesis imperfecta);
  • The STAR Demonstration Projects, which unite laboratory and patient-based research to explore new diagnostic methods and treatments;
  • The STAR Learning and Discovery Network, which facilitates ongoing collaboration, knowledge exchange, and training between the two institutions.

“This collaboration allows us to ask new questions about why these diseases behave so differently from one child to another,” said Dr. Frank Rauch, Paediatrician and Director of the Clinical Biomedical Laboratory at Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada. “By combining our clinical insights with powerful research tools, we’re building a foundation for discoveries that can lead to earlier diagnosis and more personalized treatments.”

The work will benefit patients like Gabriella, a current patient of Dr. Rauch at Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada, who currently lives with X-Linked hypophosphatemia (XLH), the most common inherited form of rickets, a disease that weakens bones. In the first joint project, scientists from both institutions will study and use advanced molecular genetics tools to track bone cells in which one of the two X chromosomes is turned off. The team will test whether, in females who carry one healthy copy of the XLH gene, the disease develops because some bone cells randomly shut down the healthy copy, leaving only the faulty one active.

The initiative supports Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada’s broader national strategy to extend care and research into new regions. With this collaboration, the hospital will continue to grow its reach beyond Montreal—strengthening its presence in Southwestern Ontario and laying the groundwork for further partnerships that bring care closer to where children live.

The initiative also aligns to the work of CHRI as the third largest hospital-based child and maternal health research institute in Canada, focused on preventing and treating diseases affecting infants, children, and youth.

“Children’s Hospital and Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada are both deeply committed to advancing paediatric health and this collaboration is a natural extension of that shared mission,” said Dr. Craig Campbell, Department Head, Paediatrics at LHSC. “Together, we can accelerate research that delivers better treatments, better outcomes, and brighter futures for young patients.”

As the STAR Program begins its initial two-year phase, both institutions anticipate expanding the registry and research efforts to include additional rare bone conditions and eventually opening the platform to collaborators across Canada.

About Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada

Established in Montreal in 1925, Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada is a bilingual, short-term, acute care hospital, providing ultra-specialized orthopaedic care to children from across Canada and around the world. The mission of the hospital is to provide treatment and rehabilitation to infants, children and young adults with orthopaedic and neuromuscular problems such as scoliosis, osteogenesis imperfecta (brittle bone disease), clubfeet, hip dysplasia, leg length discrepancies and cerebral palsy, among others. The hospital is committed to excellence and innovation in clinical practice, research and education. Affiliated with McGill University, the hospital provides clinical experience and teaching for residents and allied professionals within its outstanding new facility on the Glen site. The hospital is present in communities across Canada, thanks to telemedicine, outreach clinics, and satellite clinics.

About Children’s Hospital 

Based in London, Ontario, Children’s Hospital serves a population of 1.5 million, with over 400,000 children in the Southwestern Ontario region from birth through age 18. Celebrating 100 years of quality care in 2022, they are one of just four acute tertiary paediatric hospitals in the province of Ontario. From medical firsts like life-saving liver and bowel transplants to current state-of-the-art oncology, trauma and epilepsy programs, Children’s Hospital provides world-class paediatric care. Children’s Hospital is proud to work with partners throughout the paediatric health care system to advance and optimize paediatric care within the community, region, province, and globally. The staff and physicians at Children’s Hospital are committed to patient and family-centered care, supporting families, and championing medical advancements through education and research.  

Media Contact

Timothy Fisher
Director of Marketing and Communications at Shriners Hospitals for Children Canada
Timothy.Fisher@shrinernet.org

Celine Zadorsky
Senior Media Relations Consultant
London Health Sciences Centre
Celine.zadorsky@lhsc.on.ca


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