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Williams-Beuren Syndrome clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04463316 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Prader-Willi Syndrome

GROWing Up With Rare GENEtic Syndromes

GROW UR GENES
Start date: October 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Introduction Rare complex syndromes Patients with complex genetic syndromes, by definition, have combined medical problems affecting multiple organ systems, and intellectual disability is often part of the syndrome. During childhood, patients with rare genetic syndromes receive multidisciplinary and specialized medical care; they usually receive medical care from 3-4 medical specialists. Increased life expectancy Although many genetic syndromes used to cause premature death, improvement of medical care has improved life expectancy. More and more patients are now reaching adult age, and the complexity of the syndrome persists into adulthood. However, until recently, multidisciplinary care was not available for adults with rare genetic syndromes. Ideally, active and well-coordinated health management is provided to prevent, detect, and treat comorbidities that are part of the syndrome. However, after transition from pediatric to adult medical care, patients and their parents often report fragmented poor quality care instead of adequate and integrated health management. Therefore, pediatricians express the urgent need for adequate, multidisciplinary adult follow up of their pediatric patients with rare genetic syndromes. Medical guidelines for adults not exist and the literature on health problems in these adults is scarce. Although there is a clear explanation for the absence of adult guidelines (i.e. the fact that in the past patients with rare genetic syndromes often died before reaching adult age), there is an urgent need for an overview of medical issues at adult age, for 'best practice' and, if possible, for medical guidelines. The aim of this study is to get an overview of medical needs of adults with rare genetic syndromes, including: 1. comorbidities 2. medical and their impact on quality of life 3. medication use 4. the need for adaption of medication dose according to each syndrome Methods and Results This is a retrospective file study. Analysis will be performed using SPSS version 23 and R version 3.6.0.

NCT ID: NCT04095585 Completed - Clinical trials for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Molecular Characterization of Patients Affected by Williams Syndrome and Autism.

WBA
Start date: September 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Williams Beuren syndrome (WBS) is a multiple malformations/intellectual disability (ID) syndrome caused by 7q11.23 microdeletion and clinically characterized by a typical neurocognitive profile including excessive talkativeness and social disinhibition, often defined as "overfriendliness" and "hypersociability". WBS is generally considered as the polar opposite phenotype to Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Surprisingly, the prevalence of ASD has been reported to be significantly higher in WBS (12%) than in general population (1%). This study aims to investigate the molecular basis of the peculiar association of ASD and WBS. The investigator performed chromosomal microarray analysis and whole exome sequencing in six patients presenting with WBS and ASD, in order to evaluate the possible presence of chromosomal or gene variants considered as pathogenic.

NCT ID: NCT04051086 Not yet recruiting - Vasculopathy Clinical Trials

Quantification of Elastin Markers Synthesis in Williams-Beuren Syndrome and 7q11.23 Micro-duplication Syndrome

ELAST7
Start date: October 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Introduction: Williams-Beuren syndrome is a rare genetic disorder caused by a 7q11.23 microdeletion. The phenotype associates vasculopathy (arterial stenosis, hypertension), dimorphism and intellectual disability. Microdeletion includes several genes: ELN encodes for elastin and the haplo-insufficiency (only 1 functional copy) causes vasculopathy. The primary objective is to quantify plasma and urinary levels of elastin peptides in Williams-Beuren patients and 7q11.23 micro-duplication syndrome patients in order to correlate the levels of these markers with the number of copies of ELN gene (proportional positive relationship "gene copy number - circulating levels of markers) Materials and Methods: This prospective study will be carried out in Lyon at the "Hôpital Femme-Mère-Enfant" for 2 years. 3 groups of patients will be studied: Williams-Beuren patients (N=20), micro-duplication 7q11.23 syndrome patients (N=10) and healthy patients (N=60). Subjects will be followed for 1 day. Clinical examination (weight, height, blood pressure) and biological sample collection (blood and urine sample) will be carry out for Williams Beuren and micro-duplication 7q11.23 patients group. A large majority of visits will be part of patients' usual care. A large part of patients are systematically seen in consultation once a year. For healthy group, only biological sample collection will be carry out. The PE concentrations will be assessed and compared between the three groups of patients.

NCT ID: NCT00876200 Completed - Clinical trials for Williams Beuren Syndrome

Efficacy of Minoxidil in Children With Williams-Beuren Syndrome

Williams
Start date: March 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS) is a sporadic congenital disorder characterized by a multisystem developmental impairment. This syndrome is caused by a microdeletion in chromosome 7q11.23 that encompasses loss of the elastin locus. Elastin, which is part of the extracellular matrix, controls proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and stabilizes arterial structure. Loss of elastin gene in WBS patients has been claimed to provide a biological basis for the abnormal elastic fibre properties leading to cardiovascular abnormalities like supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS), hypertension, arteriosclerosis and stenosis in more than 50% of WBS children. These cardiovascular pathologies result in important consequences and neither curative nor preventive medicinal treatments exist at this time. Surgery is needed in more than half cases, while it is often leading to complications. Minoxidil is a well-known antihypertensive drug used in adults and children. Furthermore, according to animal studies, minoxidil seems to increase arterial elastin content by decreasing elastase activity in these tissues. Other data demonstrate that minoxidil specifically stimulate elastin synthesis. Working Hypothesis:If insufficient elastin synthesis leads to vascular complications and arterial hypertension in children with WBS, restoration of sufficient quantity of elastin should then result in prevention or inhibition of vascular malformations and improvement in arterial tension. Therefore, as a pharmacological agent capable to stimulate elastin expression, minoxidil might be a useful drug for the treatment of abnormal elastin metabolism in WBS children. Objective:To evaluate the efficacy of minoxidil on cardiovascular structure in children with Williams Beuren syndrome. Methodology: randomized controlled trial on two parallel group (23 patients in each arm) Main criterion:variation of carotid Intima-media thickness (IMT) before and after 12 months of treatment with Minoxidil versus placebo Secondary intermediate criteria of the vascular properties are arterial stiffness, cardiac and renal stenosis, arterial tension. Total study duration:30 months including a 12 month-recruitment period