View clinical trials related to Fabry Disease.
Filter by:This is a multinational, long-term follow-up study to assess the long-term safety and durability of AVR-RD-01 treatment in participants who received a single dose administration of lentiviral gene therapy in Study AVRO-RD-01-201 (treatment study). No investigational product will be administered in this study. Participants will continue periodic safety and efficacy assessments in this long-term follow-up study up to 15 years from AVR-RD-01 gene therapy infusion.
In this study, adults with Fabry Disease who have not had any treatment for this condition will be treated with Replagal. The main aim of the study is to check if Replagal improves kidney function and heart structure of participants with Fabry Disease. Participants will receive one Replagal infusion every other week for up to 104 weeks. They will visit the clinic every 12 to 14 weeks during treatment with a follow-up visit 2 weeks after treatment.
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.
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.
In this study, Investigators will conduct a prospective cohort study of dialysis patients by collecting research-quality information on patient characteristics, comorbid diseases and laboratory markers used in routine practice, as well as novel biochemical markers and genetic data. Investigators will utilize data from the cohort to test the independent relationship between biochemical and genetic markers and Fabry disease and other rare diseases.
Fabry's disease is a progressive systemic disease X-linked which combines neurological (Fabry's pain crises), dermatologic (angiokeratomas), renal (renal failure), cardiovascular (hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, valvular disease, conduction disorder, coronary heart disease) and cerebral vascular (stroke) symptoms . It is a glycosphingolipid metabolism disorder due to deficient or absent activity of the alpha-galactosidase A, causing accumulation of globotriaosylceramide in the lysosomes. The incidence is estimated being 1/40 000. Some patients suffering from Fabry's disease today are of childbearing age and their multidisciplinary care (by neurologists, obstetricians and anesthetists) raises several questions. About the anesthetic, the question of epidural block is debated in patients with neurological diseases and recommendations are not unequivocal. Indeed one of the problems of the management in those conditions is the potential worsening of the disease because of the anesthetic procedure. In addition, the possibility of an antiplatelet and / or an anticoagulant treatment in these patients may also contre-indicate an epidural block. The rate of epidural block achieved in patients with Fabry's disease is not currently known. Moreover, only sparse data on pregnancy outcomes in these patients are reported.
No investigational drug will be administered in this study for the treatment of Fabry disease. This will be a multicenter, multinational, non-treatment, cross-sectional study of young male patients with Fabry disease who have not yet initiated interventional treatment for this disease. The study will consist of a screening visit(s), a clinical investigation visit(s), and a follow-up phone contact. The objectives of the study are: - To document renal function and other Fabry disease manifestations across age in treatment-naïve, young male patients with Fabry disease. - To provide a reference group for comparison with interventional clinical trials of Fabry disease. The duration of each patient's participation in the study, inclusive of the screening visit and follow-up phone contact, will be approximately 12 weeks.
This was a long-term, open-label study of migalastat (123 milligrams [mg] of migalastat [equivalent to 150 mg of migalastat hydrochloride]) (migalastat) in participants with Fabry disease who completed treatment in a previous monotherapy trial with migalastat.
This study was designed to determine appropriate treatment with Fabrazyme at a biweekly dose of either 1 mg/kg or 3 mg/kg in a population of patients with severe renal disease burden.
Study to evaluate the long-term safety, tolerability, and pharmacodynamics (PD) of migalastat hydrochloride (HCl) (migalastat) in participants with Fabry disease