View clinical trials related to Fabry Disease.
Filter by:This is the first human treatment with PRX-102, an enzyme being developed as a long-term enzyme replacement therapy in patients with a confirmed diagnosis of Fabry disease (alpha galactosidase deficiency). The safety, tolerability, and exploratory efficacy will be evaluated in this study of increasing doses. Patients will be treated with infusions every two weeks for 12 months.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and exploratory efficacy of GC1119 (recombinant human α-galactosidase A) for enzyme replacement therapy in Fabry disease patients.
This is an exploratory study to evaluate changes in glycosphingolipid levels and other (exploratory) Fabry disease parameters in male Fabry disease participants who were previously treated with agalsidase alfa (Replagal®) 0.2 milligram per kilogram (mg/kg) every two weeks (q2w) and who are being switched to agalsidase beta (Fabrazyme®) 1.0 mg/kg q2w.
The objective of this study is to investigate whether Agalsidase alpha, a drug commonly prescribed in patients with Fabry disease, is associated with improvement of the pulmonary involvement. According to the Global Initiative for Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD), the surrogate markers for obstructive lung diseases are a decrease in both forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and FEV1/FVC ratio, whereas FVC is the forced vital capacity. However, the measurement of these lung function parameters is indicated as yearly follow-up examinations with or without the treatment of Agalsidase alpha in patients with Fabry disease.
A 5-period crossover study to evaluate the effect of meal type and timing on migalastat HCl pharmacokinetics in healthy male and female subjects. Subjects will be randomly assigned to 1 of 5 treatment sequences and will receive each treatment over the course of 5 weekly periods.
Fabry disease is a rare genetic disease characterized by an enzyme deficiency, called alpha-galactosidase A, which normally breaks down a lipid, is missing or does not function properly. As a result, the lipid accumulates in the body, this leads to multisystem impairment, including progressive renal failure. Several studies have focused on the detection of this disease in end-stage renal failure patients, transplant or hemodialysis. This study aims to diagnose the Fabry patients earlier, among men aged 18-60 years with a glomerular filtration rate estimated by MDRD between 60 and 15 ml/min/1, 73m2, or between 90 and 60 ml/min/1, 73m2 in association with proteinuria greater than 0.3 g / g or creatinine level greater than 0,5 g/l. This screening will be conducted by a blood test to measure the level of alpha-galactosidase A activity by micromethod from samples taken from blood spots on filter paper. If this assay was positive, confirmation of diagnosis of Fabry disease will done the standard method: macrodosage of leukocytic alpha-galactosidase A activity. This multicenter prospective study, openly contacted in medical practice, with patient follow-up corresponding to the management of renal insufficiency, will be offered to all departments of nephrology and dialysis for adults in the Provence - Alpes - Côte d'Azur. The objective of this study is to assess the prevalence of Fabry disease in the target population and to identify previously undiagnosed patients, enabling them to benefit from appropriate management of their disease, including whether need enzyme replacement therapy.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety of Replagal in children with Fabry disease who who have not previously been treated with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT).
The purpose of this study is to proof increasing patient satisfaction and preservation of quality of life in patients with Morbus Fabry disease receiving their Enzyme Replacement Therapy with Replagal (Agalsidase alfa) at home compared to receiving the infusions at the clinic or at doctor's practice.
This study is designed to evaluate safety and PK/PD in Canadian Fabry patients.
The purpose of this study is to observe the safety of agalsidase alfa in Canadian patients with Fabry disease.