View clinical trials related to Urea Cycle Disorder.
Filter by:Infection-related hyperammonemia in patients with urea cycle disorders is an important cause of morbidity and mortality. The relationship between immune system cells and the metabolic pathways used by these cells and inborn errors of metabolism is still under investigation. Current studies are generally based on experiments in mice. The investigators' goal is to study specific T cell subsets to understand the effects of the urea cycle on T cells. The investigators collected blood samples from participants with lysinuric protein intolerance and urea cycle disorders for basic immunophenotyping, lymphocyte proliferation in response to phytohemagglutinin and CDmix, and cytokine analysis involving Th1, Th2, and Th17 and compared them with age-matched healthy controls. They also examined amino acid profiles in sera and supernatants before and after stimulation with PMA-ionomycin.
Study around children with inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) and their healthy siblings. Collection of stool and urine to assess contribution of microbiota to disease severity.
lnborn errors of metabolism (IEM) are a heterogeneous group of rare, sometimes debilitating or even fatal diseases . In IEM, both definition and assessment of meaningful outcome parameters is often extremely difficult resulting in a limited body of evidence. Limited evidence results in weak recommendations which are perceived as unbinding and thus sustains heterogeneous study designs, choice of outcomes and interventions again producing non-uniform data. The goal of the current study is to identify and select reliable instruments, that measure patients' and their parents' perception about relevant (social, emotional, cognitive and physical) aspects in their lives. This set of instruments will secure the comparability of future research findings. Furthermore this instruments will improve the screening of paediatric IEM patients regarding their need for additional (psychosocial or consultative) support in daily hospital routine.
Original study: Study aims to enroll 3-5 children with confirmed Urinary Cycle Disorder (UCD). Subjects meeting the inclusion and exclusion criteria are included during the baseline visit. All subjects will receive the investigational product for a period of 16 weeks. At baseline, 2, 4, 8, 12 and 16 weeks the study parameters are assessed. The study amendment aims to collect case studies retrospectively of children who have used UCD Anamix Infant for at least 16 weeks, in countries where UCD Anamix Infant is already available on the market. It is aimed to collect the same study parameters of the original study at preferably the same timepoints.
This is a pilot, cross-sectional study to assess liver stiffness and markers of hepatic injury, function, and fibrosis in patients with urea cycle disorders. This study will be conducted at 3 UCDC sites: Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, University of California San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco, California and Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle,Washington
This is a randomized, controlled, open-label parallel arm study to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and ammonia control, of RAVICTI® as compared to Sodium phenylbutyrate (NaPBA) in urea cycle disorder subjects not currently or previously chronically treated with phenylacetic acid (phenylacetate; PAA) prodrugs. The study design will include: 1) Baseline Period; 2) Initial Treatment Period; 3) a RAVICTI only Transition Period 4) a RAVICTI only Maintenance Period; and 5) a RAVICTI only Safety Extension Period. The study will run for approximately 25 weeks.
A Phase 1, First-in-human, Oral Single and Multiple Dose-Escalation, Randomized, Double-blinded, Placebo-controlled Study of SYNB1020 in Healthy Adult Volunteers to Evaluate Safety, Tolerability, Dosing, and Pharmacodynamics
This is a study involving a dietary supplement. Patients with argininosuccinate lyase deficiency (ASLD) will be randomly assigned to receive either a nitric oxide dietary supplement or placebo for 24 weeks, and then crossed-over to receive the other treatment for 24 weeks. The investigators will assess the effects of the supplement in domains of general cognition, memory, executive functioning, and fine motor functioning in individuals with ASLD.
This is an open-label study consisting of a transition period to RAVICTI, followed by a safety extension period for at least 6 months and up to 24 months of treatment with RAVICTI, depending on age at enrollment. It is designed to capture information important for evaluating safety, pharmacokinetics and efficacy in young children. Subjects who are followed by or referred to the Investigator for management of their UCD. Subjects eligible for this study will include patients ranging from newborn to < 2 years of age with either a diagnosed or clinically suspected UCD.
Urea cycle disorders (UCDs) are a group of rare inherited metabolism disorders. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how UCD-related neurologic injuries affect adults with one of the most common types of UCD.