View clinical trials related to Phenylketonurias.
Filter by:The primary objective is of this Phase 1 study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of daily, multiple, oral doses of CDX-6114 when administered to patients with PKU for 14 days. The aim is to check if administration of daily, multiple, oral doses of CDX-6114 to patients with PKU for 14 days shows a clinically acceptable safety and tolerability profile.
Skeletal muscle dysfunction is a frequent and clinically relevant systemic manifestation of Chronic Pulmonary Obstructive Disease (COPD), which is still poorly understood. Therefore, the focus of this study is on the role of a deficit in tetrahydrobiopterin and nitric oxide synthase uncoupling induced by chronic oxidative stress on metabolic and vascular abnormalities in skeletal muscle of patients suffering from COPD.
Thirty eligible PKU patients (≥ 8 years), identified as tablet protein substitute users, will be recruited. Patients will firstly observe a 7-day baseline period, in which participants will continue with their existing diet, protein substitute and multi vitamin prescription. Patients will then receive the phaenylalanine-free protein substitute tablets daily for 28 days in addition to appropriate nutritional management. The aim of this prospective, single arm trial is to evaluate the acceptability (compliance, tolerance and palatability) of the phenylalanine-free protein substitute tablets in patients with proven PKU. The primary outcome measure is compliance, with secondary outcome measures of gastrointestinal tolerance, acceptability, blood amino acids, dietary intake, anthropometry and safety.
This study is an independent sub-study of the protocol titled PKU-016: A double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized study to evaluate the safety and therapeutic effects of sapropterin dihydrochloride on neuro-psychiatric symptoms in subjects with phenylketonuria (PKU ASCEND). The primary objective of this study is to determine oxidative stress in patients with classical phenylketonuria (PKU) enrolled in PKU-016, using a brain scan (called an HMPAO SPECT) at baseline and 26 weeks, and blood redox biomarkers.
The investigators will use different types of brain imaging (MRI) in patients with Phenylketonuria (PKU) who are currently not on a strict diet to test the hypothesis that there is improvement in brain circuitry and biochemistry after return to diet and/or sapropterin dihydrochloride (Kuvan).