View clinical trials related to Enteropathy.
Filter by:This study will seek to determine if whole genome sequencing (WGS) improves diagnostic rates, and outcomes for congenital diarrhea and enteropathy (CODE) patients. The investigator will enroll 180 patients in a randomized controlled study to either WGS or whole exome sequencing (WES). This study is designed to evaluate whether CODE patients would benefit from WGS guided precision medicine.
Linear growth failure, a manifestation of chronic undernutrition in early childhood, is a recalcitrant problem in resource constrained settings. The underlying causes of growth failure are multifactorial, but persistent and recurrent infection and inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract and immune activation, a condition commonly referred to as environmental enteropathy, is an important contributor. A highly enriched 13C-Sucrose Breath Test, a measure of sucrase-isomaltase activity, will be evaluated as a non-invasive biomarker of environmental enteropathy, and more specifically of intestinal brush border enzyme activity in 6 resource poor countries (Bangladesh, India, Jamaica, Kenya, Peru and Zambia) in 100 volunteers aged 12-15 months (total n=600) and evaluated relative to the lactose rhamnose test and linear and ponderal growth over a 3-6 month period following biomarker assessment. Field usability will also be assessed.