Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), one of the most common inborn errors of organic acid metabolism, is heterogeneous in etiology and clinical manifestations. Affected patients with cblA, cblB and mut classes of MMA are medically fragile and can suffer from complications such as metabolic stroke or infarction of the basal ganglia, pancreatitis, end stage renal failure, growth impairment, osteoporosis, and developmental delay. The frequency of these complications and their precipitants remain undefined. Furthermore, current treatment protocol outcomes have continued to demonstrate substantial morbidity and mortality in the patient population. Increasingly, solid organ transplantation (liver, and/or kidney) has been used to treat patients. Disordered transport and intracellular metabolism of vitamin B12 produces a distinct group of disorders that feature methylmalonic acidemia as well as (hyper)homocysteinemia. These conditions are named after the corresponding cellular complementation class (cblC, cblD, cblF, cblJ and cblX) and are also heterogenous, clinically and biochemically. The genetic disorders underlying cblE and cblG feature an isolated impairment of the activity of methionine synthase, a critical enzyme involved in the conversion of homocysteine to methionine and these disorders feature (hyper)homocysteinemia. Lastly, a group of patients can have increased methylmalonic acid and/or homocysteine in the blood or urine caused by variant(s)in recently identified (ACSF3) and unknown genes. In this protocol, we will clinically evaluate patients with methylmalonic acidemia and cobalamin metabolic defects. Routine inpatient admissions will last up to 4-5 days and involve urine collection, blood drawing, ophthalmological examination, radiological procedures, MRI/MRS, skin biopsies in some, and developmental testing. In a subset of patients who have or will receive renal, hepato- or hepato-renal transplants or have an unusual variant or clinical course and have MMA, a lumbar puncture to examine CSF metabolites will be performed. In this small group of patients, CSF metabolite monitoring may be used to adjust therapy. The study objectives will be to further delineate the spectrum of phenotypes and characterize the natural history of these enzymopathies, query for genotype/enzymatic/phenotype correlations, search for new genetic causes of methylmalonic acidemia and/or homocysteinemia, identify new disease biomarkers and define clinical outcome parameters for future clinical trials. The population will consist of participants previously evaluated at NIH, physician referrals, and families directed to the study from clinicaltrials.gov as well as the Organic Acidemia Association, Homocystinuria Network America and other national and international support groups. Most participants will be evaluated only at the NIH Clinical Center. However, if the NIH team decides that a patient under the age of 2 years is a candidate subject for this research protocol, that patient may enroll at the Children s National Medical Center (CNMC) site, pending approval by Dr Chapman, the Principal Investigator of the CNMC location Individuals may also enroll in the tissue collection only part of the study at the UPMC Children s Hospital of Pittsburgh or share medical history and clinical data via telemedicine visits remotely. Outcome measures will largely be descriptive and encompass correlations between clinical, biochemical and molecular parameters.


Clinical Trial Description

Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA), one of the most common inborn errors of organic acid metabolism, is heterogeneous in etiology and clinical manifestations. Affected patients with mut, cblA, and cblB classes of MMA are medically fragile and can suffer from complications such as metabolic stroke or infarction of the basal ganglia, pancreatitis, end stage renal failure, growth impairment, osteoporosis, and developmental delay. The frequency of these complications and their precipitants remain undefined. Furthermore, current outcomes have continued to demonstrate substantial morbidity and mortality in the patient population. Increasingly, solid organ transplantation (liver, and/or kidney) has been used to treat patients. Disordered transport and intracellular metabolism of vitamin B12 produces a distinct group of disorders that feature methylmalonic acidemia as well as (hyper)homocysteinemia. These conditions are named after the corresponding cellular complementation class (cblC, cblD, cblF, cblJ and cblX) and are also heterogeneous, clinically and biochemically. The genetic disorders underlying cblE and cblG feature an isolated impairment of the activity of methionine synthase, a critical enzyme involved in the conversion of homocysteine to methionine and these disorders feature (hyper)homocysteinemia. Lastly, a group of patients can have increased methylmalonic acid and/or homocysteine and/or malonic acid in the blood or urine caused by variant(s) in recently identified (ACSF3) and unknown genes. In this protocol, we will clinically evaluate patients with methylmalonic acidemia and cobalamin metabolic defects. Routine inpatient admissions and outpatient evaluations will last up to 4-5 days and involve urine collection, blood drawing, ophthalmological examination, radiological procedures, MRI/MRS, skin biopsies in some, and developmental testing. The study objectives will be to further delineate the spectrum of phenotypes and characterize the natural history of these enzymopathies, query for genotype/enzymatic/phenotype correlations, search for new genetic causes of methylmalonic acidemia and/or homocysteinemia, identify new disease biomarkers and define clinical outcome parameters for future clinical trials. The population will consist of participants previously evaluated at NIH, physician referrals, and families directed to the study from clinicaltrials.gov as well as the Organic Acidemia Association, Homocystinuria Network America and other national and international support groups. Most participants will be evaluated only at the NIH Clinical Center. However, if the NIH team decides that a patient under the age of 2 years is a candidate subject for this research protocol, that patient may enroll at the Children s National Medical Center (CNMC) site, pending approval by Dr. Chapman, the Principal Investigator of the CNMC location. Individuals may also enroll in the tissue collection only part of the study at the UPMC Children s Hospital of Pittsburgh or share medical history and clinical data via telemedicine visits remotely. Outcome measures will largely be descriptive and encompass correlations between clinical, biochemical and molecular parameters. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00078078
Study type Observational
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact Jennifer Sloan, Ph.D.
Phone (301) 443-9055
Email jsloan@mail.nih.gov
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date June 7, 2004

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT03548779 - North Carolina Genomic Evaluation by Next-generation Exome Sequencing, 2 N/A
Completed NCT01049854 - CD34+Selection for Partially Matched Family or Matched Unrelated Adult Donor Transplant Phase 2
Completed NCT00001596 - Oral Pirfenidone for the Pulmonary Fibrosis of Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT01003912 - Fetal Umbilical Cord Blood (UCB) Transplant for Lysosomal Storage Diseases Phase 1
Completed NCT00744692 - Reduced Intensity Conditioning for Umbilical Cord Blood Transplant in Pediatric Patients With Non-Malignant Disorders Phase 1
Completed NCT00692926 - Unrelated Umbilical Cord Blood Transplantation Augmented With ALDHbr Umbilical Cord Blood Cells Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05818566 - Orphan Drugs for Inherited Metabolic Diseases
Completed NCT05330039 - Characterization of Intestinal Microbiota in Children With Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM)
Withdrawn NCT03866954 - Trial of Erythrocyte Encapsulated Thymidine Phosphorylase In Mitochondrial Neurogastrointestinal Encephalomyopathy Phase 2
Completed NCT03911089 - A Collection of Case Studies in Infants With UCD to Evaluate Infant Growth and the Safety of a New Medical Food for UCD N/A
Completed NCT03058848 - Evaluation of PKU Start N/A
Suspended NCT04399694 - Identification and Characterization of Novel Non-Coding Variants That Contribute to Genetic Disorders
Terminated NCT00654433 - ALD-101 Adjuvant Therapy of Unrelated Umbilical Cord Blood Transfusion (UCBT) in Patients With Inherited Metabolic Diseases Phase 3
Completed NCT03168399 - Evaluation of PKU Explore N/A
Completed NCT00328159 - Nutritional Therapy of the Deficits of Oxidation Mitochondrial of the Fatty Acids N/A
Completed NCT04309331 - Market Research - Acceptability Trial for a New PKU Amino Acid Based Protein Substitute N/A
Completed NCT04709965 - Evaluating Face-Recognition Technology in Syndrome Diagnosis N/A
Recruiting NCT06360913 - Blood Spot and Urine Metabolomic Screening Applied to Rare Diseases N/A
Completed NCT00309400 - The Early History of Universal Screening for Metabolic Disorders N/A
Completed NCT00004378 - Stem Cell Transplantation (SCT) for Genetic Diseases N/A