96 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
The Fabry Registry is an ongoing, international multi-center, strictly observational program that tracks the routine clinical outcomes for patients with Fabry disease, irrespective of treatment status. No experimental intervention is involved; patients in the Registry undergo clinical assessments and receive care as determined by the patient's treating physician. The primary objectives of the Registry are: * To enhance the understanding of the variability, progression, and natural history of Fabry disease, including heterozygous females with the disease; * To assist the Fabry medical community with the development of recommendations for monitoring patients and reports on patient outcomes to help optimize patient care; * To characterize and describe the Fabry population as a whole; * To evaluate the long-term safety and effectiveness of Fabrazyme® Fabry Pregnancy Sub-registry: This Sub-registry is a multicenter, international, longitudinal, observational, and voluntary program designed to track pregnancy outcomes for any pregnant woman enrolled in the Fabry Registry, regardless of whether she is receiving disease-specific therapy (such as enzyme replacement therapy with agalsidase beta) and irrespective of the commercial product with which she may be treated. Data from the Sub-registry are also used to fulfill various global regulatory requirements, to support product development/reimbursement, and for other research and non-research-related purposes. No experimental intervention is given; thus a patient will undergo clinical assessments and receive standard of care treatment as determined by the patient's physician. If a patient consents to this Sub-registry, information about the patient's medical and obstetric history, pregnancy, and birth will be collected, and, if a patient consents to data collection for her infant, data on infant growth through month 36 postpartum will be collected.
The goal of this observational registry is to evaluate the safety and outcomes of pregnancy and lactation in women with Fabry disease who are exposed to pegunigalsidase alfa within 30 days prior to conception and/or during pregnancy and lactation. The main objectives are to: * Assess pregnancy outcomes, including maternal and infant health. * Evaluate the occurrence of congenital malformations and other neonatal outcomes. This is a global, decentralized, single-arm, prospective and retrospective registry planned to enroll participants over a 10-year period. Eligible patients may be enrolled by their physician or may self-enroll, where permitted by local regulations. Data will be collected through a secure web-based platform, allowing patients and physicians to enter information via electronic case report forms (eCRFs). Pregnancy and clinical outcomes will be documented throughout pregnancy and up to 12 months post-birth. Data from self-enrolled patients will be confirmed by their primary care or attending physician. This registry is observational and does not impact clinical care or treatment decisions.
An open-label study to evaluate the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and efficacy of migalastat treatment in pediatric subjects 2 to \< 12 years of age with Fabry disease and with amenable GLA variants.
This Phase 1/2 first-in-human (FIH) study is designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and efficacy of HM15421 in patients with FD.
This is an open-label, multi-center study to evaluate safety, tolerability, and exploratory efficacy of a single dose of intravenously-administered AMT-191. The plan is to investigate 2 sequential dose cohorts with 3-6 Participants per cohort. Participants will continue receiving regularly scheduled enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) until they meet the criteria for withdrawal.
The purpose of this research is to collect biological samples (urine) to develop assays for immune biomarkers to possibly in the future be able to screen subjects with Fabry disease and be able to understand better progression of nephropathy in Fabry disease and predict nephropathy in Fabry disease.
A longitudinal pilot study will be conducted to determine if there are additional testing modalities that are effective in broadly phenotyping subclinical dysfunction in patients with Fabry disease. Individual patients will undergo serial testing over a two-year period to evaluate for changes in their cardiovasculaorenal function during this period. Novel modalities evaluated will include measures of arterial stiffness, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), and novel serum and urine biomarkers. The benefit of these measures being evaluated is that they are noninvasive, can be performed rapidly, and have reduced costs compared to the current standard screening modalities. Results from these evaluations will be compared to cMRI and standard urine and serum biomarkers performed clinically per local standard of care. The results will also be compared to both published normative data and data from patients with diabetes mellitus, who have a similar microvascular disease process to patients with Fabry disease.
This is an 18-month, multicenter, randomized, active-control, parallel-group Phase 3 study, in which participants will be randomized to venglustat versus standard of care therapy (agalsidase alfa, agalsidase beta, or migalastat) to evaluate the effect of venglustat on left ventricular mass index (LVMI) in adult participants with Fabry disease and left ventricular hypertrophy. * Study visits will take place approximately every 3 to 6 months * Participants who complete the randomized period may continue to the long-term extension (LTE) to receive venglustat for up to additional 45 months with the total study duration up to 5.3 years maximum.
This is a 12-month, parallel treatment, Phase 3, double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled study to evaluate the effect of venglustat on neuropathic and abdominal pain symptoms of Fabry disease in participants ≥16 years of age with Fabry disease who are treatment-naïve or untreated for at least 6 months. * Study visits will take place approximately every 3 months. * The double-blind period will be followed by an open-label extension (OLE) during which participants who have completed the double-blind period will be treated with venglustat for up to an additional 12 months.
The objective of this study is to increase the understanding surrounding the choices presented to patients and families impacted by Fabry disease.
In Fabry disease (FD), α-galactosidase A deficiency leads to the accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (Lyso-Gb3 and Gb3), triggering a pathologic cascade that causes progressive damage to multiple organs, including the heart. The heart is one of the organs that is very sensitive to the deficiency of α-galactosidase A. There is a subgroup of patients with significant residual α-galactosidase activity and a phenotype with primary cardiac involvement, occasionally referred as "cardiac variant." The manifestations of cardiac involvement in FD are left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), diastolic dysfunction, microvascular angina. Cardiac hypertrophy is the most common cardiac pathology and cause of death in patients with FD. The elevation of the inflammatory markers strongly demonstrates that chronic inflammation drives the cardiovascular pathophysiology in FD. Moreover, plasma TNF, TNFR2, Il-6 specifically elevated in FD patients with cardio hypertrophy. The chronic inflammation in combination with elevated Lyso-Gb3 further drives the FD progression even under therapy. The expression of the endothelial-cardiomyocyte growth factors will change in response to chronic inflammation during the development of cardiac hypertrophy. This is a clinical observational study designed to identify the role of inflammatory signaling markers and secreted growth factors in the progression of cardiac pathology in FD
The objective of this treatment protocol is to provide guidance to Treating Physicians who seek access to pegunigalsidase alfa for Fabry patients whose clinical condition, in the opinion of the Treating Physician, requires treatment with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with pegunigalsidase alfa and a) cannot be adequately treated with currently approved FDA products and/or b) are not able or willing to participate in any of the on-going clinical trials in the United States.
This is a prospective multicenter, open-label, dose-escalation trial to assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacodynamics of 4D-310 following a single IV administration. The study population is comprised of adult males and females with Fabry Disease.
This is an international, non-interventional research study of adult patients with Fabry Disease and their caregivers. The study comprised a prospective time and motion evaluation and a cross-sectional evaluation of patient and caregiver-reported outcomes. The study evaluated the time associated with the preparation and administration of a single dose of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in patients by health care providers as well as the impact on Fabry patients and caregivers time and costs associated with an ERT treatment. The study also evaluated the patients' quality of life wellbeing, fatigue and work productivity.
This is a global prospective observational study of women with Fabry disease and their infants during pregnancy and/or breastfeeding. The study will evaluate outcomes of pregnancy and/or breastfeeding in women and infants exposed to migalastat.
This is a long-term, Open-label Study to Evaluate the Safety, Pharmacodynamics, and Efficacy of Migalastat in Subjects \> 12 Years of Age With Fabry Disease and Amenable GLA Variants
This is the first in human treatment with ST-920, a recombinant AAV2/6 vector encoding the cDNA for human a-Gal A. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of ascending doses of ST-920. ST-920 aims to provide stable, long-term production of α-Gal A at therapeutic levels in subjects with Fabry disease. The constant production of α-Gal A in humans should, importantly, enable reduction and potentially clearance of Fabry disease substrates Gb3 and lyso-Gb3. On Day 1, patients will be infused intravenously with a single dose of ST-920 and followed for a period of 52 weeks.
This is a multinational, open-label study to assess the safety and efficacy of FLT190 in up to 15 adult male participants with classical Fabry disease.
The objective of this study is to obtain follow up data on a cohort of well-studied patients with Fabry disease who have been on ERT since childhood for a total of about 15 years.
A study to determine the long-term safety and tolerability of oral lucerastat in adult subjects with Fabry disease. This study includes a sub-study evaluating kidney Gb3 inclusions (and other histologic lesions) in male participants with classic Fabry disease who have been treated for at least 2 years with lucerastat monotherapy in study ID-069A302.
The purpose of this research project is: * to use an advanced quantitative MRI technique (FBFI) to detect and quantify brain lesion in patients with FD * to use fMRI to identify altered brain function * to use FBFI and fMRI together to map altered connectivity in response to brain lesions
The objective of CLI-06657AA1-03 (formerly PB-102-F51) is to evaluate the long-term safety, tolerability, and efficacy of 2 mg/kg pegunigalsidase alfa administered intravenously every four weeks in adult Fabry patients who have successfully completed PB-102-F50.
The objective of CLI-06657AA1-04 (formerly PB-102-F60) is to evaluate the long-term safety, tolerability, and efficacy parameters of 1 mg/kg pegunigalsidase alfa administered intravenously every other week in adult Fabry patients who have successfully completed studies PB-102-F03, PB-102-F20 or PB-102-F30.
This was a multinational, open-label study to assess the efficacy and safety of AVR-RD-01 in approximately 15 male subjects, who were 16 years of age or older and postpubertal with a confirmed diagnosis of classic Fabry disease based on deficient alpha galactosidase A (AGA) enzyme activity who were considered treatment naïve, i.e., had not previously received treatment with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) and/or chaperone therapy within 3 years of the time of Screening.
This study aimed to determine the efficacy and safety of lucerastat oral monotherapy in adult subjects with Fabry disease.
This open-label switchover study will assess the safety, efficacy, and pharmacokinetics of pegunigalsidase alfa (PRX-102) 2 mg/kg administered every 4 weeks for 52 weeks in Fabry patients previously treated with ERT: agalsidase alfa or agalsidase beta for at least 3 years. Safety and efficacy exploratory endpoints will be evaluated throughout the study period and pharmacokinetics will be obtained on Day 1 and Week 52.
Cerebrovascular events, such as stroke, are a devastating complication of Fabry disease that results in part from storage of complex lipids in both large and small vessels. Understanding how the genotype influences the phenotype or clinical presentation can help us understand which patients are at risk for the complications of Fabry disease. This study aims to follow the natural history of this disease will help us understand and predict long-term outcomes for patients.
Patients will undergo a SmartPill test to gain additional understanding of Fabry disease manifestation via motility abnormalities in order to improve symptom targeted therapy. An additional Endoscopic mucosal resection may be performed on further qualifying patients. Tissue analysis from this biopsy will include evaluation of abnormalities of cellular structure and morphology with correlation with gastrointestinal complaints for each patient and comparison against age matched non-Fabry patient tissue. The hypothesis is that patients with fabry disease will have abnormal motility which will correlate with the patients symptoms and quality of life as noted on the questionnaires.
Primary Objective: To assess the long-term safety of GZ/SAR402671 in adult male participants with Fabry disease who previously completed study ACT13739 (NCT02489344). Secondary Objective: To assess the long-term effect of GZ/SAR402671 on pharmacodynamic and exploratory efficacy endpoints in adult male participants with Fabry disease who previously completed study ACT13739.
Primary Objective: To assess the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics (PD), and exploratory efficacy of GZ/SAR402671 in enzyme replacement therapy treatment-naïve adult male participants diagnosed with Fabry disease.