View clinical trials related to Huntington Disease.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to discover a panel of mitochondrial metabolomics biomarkers for Huntington's disease.
This study is a multi-center, open-label study of intravenous (IV) ANX005 in subjects with, or at risk for, manifest Huntington's Disease (HD).
Evaluate the safety and tolerability of combined oral thiamine with biotin therapy in patients with Huntington´s disease in mild to moderate stages and it is intended to evaluate the biological effect of the treatment in the central nervous system of these patients using as the main biomarker the increase in the level of thiamine monophosphate (TMP) in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of these patients with Huntington Disease (HD) during a follow-up period of one year. Our main hypothesis is that combined thiamine-biotin oral therapy is a secure and well-tolerated treatment, potentially capable of modifying the disease course or avoiding the progression of symptoms in early-stages HD patients
Huntington's disease is a disabling neurodegenerative disease. Patients present with involuntary movements of the body and cognitive symptoms like behavioral problem, difficulty in planning tasks, etc. No effective treatment is currently available for them apart from symptomatic therapy. Currently, studies are going on the effectiveness of noninvasive brain stimulation (NIBS) in neurodegenerative diseases. It is a mode of brain stimulation technique where current is delivered into the brain by placing electrodes into their scalp. Transcranial pulsed current stimulation (tPCS) is a new modality of noninvasive brain stimulation. It is a device that generates electrical impulses. The current generated from this device can stimulate underlying brain areas. The investigators have planned to study the feasibility of non-invasive brain stimulation via tPCS in these patients of Huntington's disease. At first, the investigators will rate their involuntary body movement by a standard scale, assess arm movements by a robotic device, assess speech with standard protocol, assess brain electrophysiology by electroencephalography (EEG) and will also do gait (walking) analysis. Next, the investigators will give them 2 week (20 min/day) stimulation via real tPCS (active stimulation) or placebo (sham stimulation). After 2 weeks of stimulation, the investigators will re-assess the patient using the same tools mentioned pre-stimulation. Each patient will receive real and placebo stimulation with a 1-month gap in between. They will not know whether they are receiving real stimulation or placebo. Assessment will be done before stimulation, after 2 week real stimulation and after 2 week sham stimulation.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of exogenous melatonin in improving sleep quality in HD gene carriers.
Huntington's disease often brings together 3 types of symptoms at one time or another of the disease during its evolution: motor, cognitive and psychiatric. Management requires comprehensive and multidisciplinary health, social or medico-social support. Its development generates additional difficulties for professionals who very often qualify this disease as "very complex" because it leads to a deep and severe impairment of physical and intellectual capacities. The sick person gradually loses their autonomy and becomes dependent for the acts of daily life, hence the choice of this disease for our study. Our study is focused on the quality of life at home of patients followed by the Angers Reference Center, "expert" on neurogenetic pathologies. Studies focusing on patients' quality of life at home have so far never been undertaken for a rare neurodegenerative disease like Huntington's disease.
SHIELD HD is an international, multisite, prospective, longitudinal cohort natural history study to assess the natural history of HD and its biomarkers that are associated with modulation of the number of cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) repeats in the mutant Huntingtin (HTT) gene. Approximately 60 patients will be enrolled into the study and followed for up to 24 months at clinical sites in North America and Europe. The results of this study will inform assessments for a future interventional treatment trial.
This is a Phase 3, open-label study to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of valbenazine, and to provide participants continued access to valbenazine for the treatment of chorea associated with Huntington disease.
The objectives are to better document the psychosocial status and needs of caregiver of HD patients and understand the dyad functioning, facing the disease at various stages.
Later Stage HD Assessments (LSA) is an observational, multinational study aiming at developing two assessments that can be used to measure critical milestones and events during the later stages of Huntington's disease (HD). An important aspect of the evaluation will be to assess whether the assessments can be administered to a companion either in-person or remotely (i.e. by phone contact with the companion). Therefore, these assessments will be evaluated for their internal consistency, reliability and validity. Once established, these assessments may be incorporated into a large scale, global observational study of HD and/or other HD clinical studies as well as use them for planning clinical trials.