View clinical trials related to Wolman Disease.
Filter by:The very low carbohydrates diet (VLCKD) induces liver steatosis amelioration. Lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) deficiency plays a role in fats accumulation in liver. To date, no studies have assessed LAL activity in morbid obesity. The aim of our study is to evaluate VLCKD impact on metabolic/vascular parameters and LAL activity in obese patients. A VLCKD is administered for 25 days to 52 morbid obese patients (BMI 44.7±8.3 kg/m², age 49±12.5 years); at baseline and after diet we evaluated: BMI, glyco-lipidic pattern, abdominal ultrasonography (liver steatosis and visceral fat area) and flow-mediated dilation (FMD). In a subgroup of 20 patients we also tested lysosomal acid lipase (LAL)-activity. A group of healthy normal weight subjects (age 43±13, BMI 22.8±2.6 kg/m²) was also included in the study.
The primary outcome of this study is the development of a clinical profile of pediatric patients with LAL-D, which will enable the Sponsor to provide more focused guidance to the medical community as to which pediatric patients should be tested for LAL-D.
Lysosomal Acid Lipase (LAL) deficiency is a rare, autosomal recessive storage disease linked to decrease enzymatic activity of LAL, responsible for intracellular accumulation of cholesterol esters and triglycerides. The accumulation of lipid is in hepatocytes, Kupffer cells and macrophages leading to a fatty liver, hepatic fibrosis that can evolve up to cirrhosis. LAL deficiency is responsible for significant morbidity and early mortality in children, adolescents and adults in connection with a multi visceral disease reaching the liver, gastrointestinal tract and the vascular endothelium. The disease is caused by homozygous or heterozygous mutations in the gene (LIPA chromosome 10q23.2-23.3) which is responsible for the synthesis of the LAL. The disease can be diagnosed by enzymatic analysis using few drops of blood absorbed onto blotting paper . Patients with this deficiency LAL, have no or reduced activity of this enzyme. Because of its rarity, the deficit in LAL is under diagnosed or is diagnosed in patients with liver biological disturbances and / or lipid profile disturbances, steatohepatitis-hepatitis (NASH), the steatosis (NAFLD), the cryptogenic cirrhosis or Wilson disease. Inclusion period of 12 to 18 months (100 patients).
Lysosomal Acid Lipase (LAL) deficiency is a rare, autosomal recessive storage disease linked to decrease enzymatic activity of LAL, responsible for intracellular accumulation of cholesterol esters and triglycerides. The accumulation of lipid is in hepatocytes, Kupffer cells and macrophages leading to a fatty liver, hepatic fibrosis that can evolve up to cirrhosis. LAL deficiency is responsible for significant morbidity and early mortality in children, adolescents and adults in connection with a multi visceral disease reaching the liver, gastrointestinal tract and the vascular endothelium. The disease is caused by homozygous or heterozygous mutations in the gene (LIPA chromosome 10q23.2-23.3) which is responsible for the synthesis of the LAL. The disease can be diagnosed by enzymatic analysis using few drops of blood absorbed onto blotting paper. Patients with this deficiency LAL, have no or reduced activity of this enzyme. Because of its rarity, the deficit in LAL is under diagnosed or is diagnosed in patients with liver biological disturbances and / or lipid profile disturbances, steatohepatitis-hepatitis (NASH), the steatosis (NAFLD), the cryptogenic cirrhosis or Wilson disease. Inclusion period of 12 to 18 months (100 patients).
Development of a new MS-based biomarker for the early and sensitive diagnosis of Wolman disease blood (plasma)
This is an open-label, multicenter expanded access protocol to allow patients with a confirmed diagnosis of Lysosomal Acid Lipase (LAL) Deficiency in the United States (US), access to sebelipase alfa (recombinant lysosomal acid lipase [rhLAL]) until commercial product is available. Patients enrolled in the expanded access protocol will receive 1 mg/kg intravenous infusions of sebelipase alfa every other week.
Cholesteryl Ester Storage Disease (CESD) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder (LSD) caused by mutations in the lysosomal acid lipase gene (LIPA) that markedly reduce lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) activity, leading to the accumulation of lipids, predominately cholesteryl esters and triglycerides, in various tissues and cell types. In the liver, accumulation of lipids leads to diffuse microvesicular steatosis, which progresses to fibrosis and ultimately, to micronodular cirrhosis. Patients typically present with hepatomegaly, liver dysfunction, hepatic failure and type II hyperlipidemia. Although hepatosteatosis is a typical finding, the liver biopsy diagnosis may be misclassified as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis or cryptogenic liver disease. Biopsy and radiological findings are not considered diagnostic, but help to suspicion of CESD. The definitive diagnosis is based on deficient LAL activity and/or LIPA gene mutations. CESD is pan-ethnic, however, the disease incidence is unknown. The estimated incidence of the disease indicates that CESD should be largely underdiagnosed especially in European patients. Elevation of serum transaminases, and hepatomegaly are early indications of liver impairment. Therefore, CESD should be considered as a differential diagnosis in liver disease of unknown origin. To data, there is no study which evaluated the frequency of CESD in children with unexplained transaminase elevation and/or organomegaly and/or chronic liver disease. The aim of this prospective, multicenter and cross-sectional study is to investigate frequency of CESD in children with unexplained transaminase elevation and/or and/or chronic liver disease and to identify demographic and clinical features of CESD.
The objective of this study is to determine the frequency of Lysosomal Acid Lipase Deficiency (LAL D) by lysosomal acid lipase (LAL) enzyme activity assay in patients who are considered to be at risk.
This was an open-label, repeat-dose, study of sebelipase alfa in infants with rapidly progressive lysosomal acid lipase deficiency (LAL-D). Eligible participants received once-weekly infusions of sebelipase alfa for up to 3 years.
This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of sebelipase alfa in a broad population of participants with lysosomal acid lipase deficiency (LAL-D).