Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Background: - Little is known about how the brain changes during childhood and adolescence, how genes affect this process, or how the brains of people with 7q11.23 genetic variation change during this period. Researchers are interested in using magnetic resonance imaging to study how the brain changes in healthy children and children with 7q11.23 genetic variation, including Williams syndrome and 7q11.23 duplication syndrome. Objectives: - To study developmental changes in the brains of healthy children and children who have been diagnosed with Williams syndrome,7q11.23 duplication syndrome, or other 7q11.23 genetic variation. Eligibility: - Healthy children and adolescents between 5 and 17 years of age. - Children and adolescents between 5 and 17 years of age who have been diagnosed with Williams syndrome, 7q11.23 duplication syndrome, or have other 7q11.23 genetic variation. Design: - Participants will have a brief physical examination and tests of memory, attention, concentration, and thinking. Parents will be asked about their child s personality, behavior characteristics, and social interaction and communication skills. - Both participants and their parents may be asked to complete additional questionnaires or take various tests as required for the study. - Participants will have approximately 10 hours of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning, usually over 4 to 5 days, within a one month period. Some of these tests will require the participants to do specific tasks while inside the MRI scanner. - Participants will be asked to return to the National Institutes of Health clinical center to repeat these procedures every 2 years thereafter until age 18.


Clinical Trial Description

Williams syndrome is a rare disorder caused by hemizygous microdeletion of approximately 1.6 megabases on chromosomal band 7q11.23, typically by spontaneous mutation. The disorder is characterized by a collection of unique neuropsychiatric manifestations, including marked visuospatial construction deficits and hypersociability. Because the genes involved in WS are known, the study of neural mechanisms in WS affords a privileged setting for investigating genetic influences on complex brain functions in a bottom-up way. Previous neuroimaging studies of adults with Williams syndrome resulted in a clear delineation of the Williams syndrome brain phenotype. Underlying the syndrome s cognitive hallmark, visuospatial construction impairment, is a neurostructural anomaly (decreased gray matter volume) and adjacent abnormal neural function in the parietal sulcus region of the dorsal visual processing stream. Subtle structural hippocampal alterations, along with abnormalities in regional cerebral blood flow, neurofunctional activation, and N-acetyl aspartate concentration also contribute to the visuospatial phenotype. Underlying the syndrome s social cognition features are structural and functional abnormalities in the orbitofrontal cortex, an important affect and social regulatory region that participates in a fronto-amygdala regulatory network found to be dysfunctional in Williams syndrome. The findings in adult Williams syndrome patients have created a paradigm for identifying brain phenotypes linked to specific genes and for guiding research aimed at understanding the mechanism by which gene effects are translated in the brain to clinical phenomena. However, it is clear that the cognitive and behavioral disturbances in Williams syndrome emerge over the course of childhood and adolescence from a complex interplay of altered neural systems, which must be studied from a developmental and translational perspective. To meet this imperative, we propose a cross-sectional and longitudinal neuroimaging study of children with Williams syndrome to track the emergence and modification of the altered neural circuitry observed in the adult population. With non-invasive multimodal magnetic resonance imaging including structural MRI, functional MRI (fMRI), and diffusion tensor MRI-we propose to target those neural systems associated with key clinical features (e.g. visuospatial construction impairment and abnormal social cognition). We will employ experimental methods previously successful in assessing cognitive and emotional processing in the adult population. For neurofunctional studies, each task paradigm is optimized to provide adequate statistical power for single subject mapping, and to be amenable for young children. Additionally, structural MRI studies will allow for in depth tracking of structural changes, including changes in gray-white matter ratios and the integrity of white matter tracts throughout the brain. Blood samples for genetic analysis will be collected. One hundred children with classic Williams syndrome deletions, those with smaller deletions, and those with duplications, along with 50 of their unaffected siblings, will be studied at the NIH Clinical Center at two-year intervals for repeat neuroimaging studies. Additionally, approximately 115 unrelated, healthy children will also be studied. fMRI tasks will be piloted on fifteen of the latter. We will continue to study the children enrolled in this protocol after they turn 18 in order to determine the developmental trajectory of brain structure and function from childhood through adulthood. Additionally, fifty adults with classic Williams syndrome deletions, those with smaller deletions, and those with duplications will be studied at the NIH Clinical Center at two-year intervals for repeat neuroimaging studies in order to establish good adult end-points for our imaging protocol. Studying adults with WS and abnormalities of the WS genetic region with the same tasks and scanner as used for children will allow us to establish an adult WS comparison group against which children can be directly compared and also allow us to better determine the maturation of neural structure and function in WS through adulthood. Typically developing children whom we will continue to study after they turn 18 will serve as the control comparison group for adults with Williams syndrome . Primary outcome measures include size and integrity of grey and white matter; functional MRI BOLD responses during rest, cognitive and emotion information processing; DTI anisotropy measures of white matter tracts; tissue perfusion (blood flow) measured with arterial spin labeling (ASL); and mcDespot myelin water fraction. Secondary outcome measures include relationship of neuropsychological assessments and genotyping to the imaging results. Our prior success in delineating the brain phenotype in adult Williams syndrome patients will provide the crucial context within which to view the emergence and modification of these neural circuit abnormalities from a developmental perspective in children with Williams syndrome and from which to launch translational studies of specific gene effects on brain and behavioral phenotypes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01132885
Study type Observational
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact Tiffany A Nash
Phone (240) 205-0333
Email tiffany.nash@nih.gov
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date January 23, 2011

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT00004351 - Study of Phenotype and Genotype Correlations in Patients With Contiguous Gene Deletion Syndromes N/A
Completed NCT03758651 - Williams Syndrome Strength, Hormones, Activity & Adiposity, DNA Programming, Eating Study
Enrolling by invitation NCT03836300 - Parent-Infant Inter(X)Action Intervention (PIXI) N/A
Completed NCT02212314 - Response Inhibition Training for Children With Williams Syndrome N/A
Recruiting NCT00768820 - The Psychiatric and Cognitive Phenotypes in Velocardiofacial Syndrome Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04610424 - Cooperative Parent Mediated Therapy in Children With Fragile X Syndrome and Williams Syndrome N/A
Recruiting NCT02706639 - Williams Syndrome (WS) and Supravalvar Aortic Stenosis (SVAS) DNA and Tissue Bank
Completed NCT02692846 - WS-SAVE Study (Williams Syndrome Skin and Vessel Elasticity Study)
Recruiting NCT06315699 - Clemastine Fumarate in the Treatment of Neurodevelopmental Delays in Williams Syndrome Phase 3
Recruiting NCT01793168 - Rare Disease Patient Registry & Natural History Study - Coordination of Rare Diseases at Sanford
Recruiting NCT06087757 - Clemastine Treatment in Individuals With Williams Syndrome Phase 3
Enrolling by invitation NCT05430763 - Motor Deficits and Signal Conduction in Individuals With Williams Syndrome
Completed NCT01864304 - Fat Distribution and Glucose Metabolism in Williams Syndrome N/A
Recruiting NCT02840448 - Impact of Elastin Mediated Vascular Stiffness on End Organs
Recruiting NCT03827525 - Cognitive and Behavioral Therapy of Anxiety in Williams Syndrome
Completed NCT04807517 - Buspirone Treatment of Anxiety in Williams Syndrome Phase 4
Completed NCT00013962 - Vitamin D Metabolism and the Williams Syndrome N/A