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Clinical and Molecular Investigations Into Ciliopathies

National Institutes of Health (NIH) logo

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Ciliopathy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

NIH

Identifiers

NCT00068224
03-HG-0264
030264

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will evaluate patients ciliopathies. People with ciliopathies develop fibrocystic disease of the kidneys and liver, retinal degeneration, obesity, structural and functional defects of the central nervous system and the eyes, abnormal bone growth, abnormal sidedness of internal organs and polydactyly. The goal of the study is to better understand the medical complications of these disorders and identify characteristics that can help in the design of new treatments.

Full description

Human diseases caused by defects of the primary cilium (ciliopathies) are a group of distinct disorders with overlapping features. Clinical features of ciliopathies include fibrocystic disease of the kidneys and liver, retinal degeneration, obesity, structural and functional defects of the central nervous system and the eyes, abnormal bone growth, abnormal sidedness of internal organs and polydactyly. Human ciliopathies characterized by variable combinations of these features include autosomal recessive (ARPKD) and dominant (ADPKD) polycystic kidney diseases, nephronophthisis (NPHP), Joubert syndrome and related disorders (JSRD), Bardet-Biedl (BBS), Meckel-Gruber (MKS), Oral-Facial-Digital-type 1 (OFD1), and Alstrom syndromes (AS) and skeletal disorders such as Jeune syndrome (JS) and cleidocranial dysplasia. ARPKD, the most common pediatric ciliopathy, is characterized by cystic degeneration of the kidneys and congenital hepatic fibrosis of the liver. JSRD are a heterogenous group of syndromes characterized by a distinctive cerebellar and brainstem malformation (molar tooth sign), intellectual disability, abnormal eye movements, and abnormal respiratory pattern in infancy. Other common features seen in subsets of JSRD patients include, fibrocystic renal disease, congenital hepatic fibrosis, retinal degeneration, retinal colobomas, occipital encephalocele, and polydactyly. AS and BBS are ciliopathies characterized by obesity and retinal degeneration and hepatorenal disease in most cases. BBS patients also exhibit postaxial polydactyly, cognitive impairment, male hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism and female genitourinary malformations. Additional features in AS include metabolic syndrome associated with insulin resistance and hyperlipidemia, cardiomyopathy and sensorineural deafness. OFD-I is characterized by polycystic kidney disease and oral, digital and brain anomalies including cerebellar hypoplasia with or without Dandy-Walker malformation. JS is a skeletal ciliopathy characterized by small thorax, short-limbed short stature, fibrocystic renal disease and retinal degeneration. The frequency and characteristics and natural history of specific organ/system disease in ciliopathies are either unknown or poorly defined, mostly because of the limited data available from retrospective reports of small numbers of patients.

Enrollment

374 patients

Sex

All

Ages

5 months to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

  • INCLUSION CRITERIA:

Children and adults who carry a clinical diagnosis of a known ciliopathy such as ARPKD, CHF, JSRD, BBS, OFD1, AS and those patients who have typical features suggestive of a ciliopathy but not fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for any

of the known disorders (unknown types of PKD and/or CHF, retinal degeneration, variants of molar tooth sign such as Dandy-Walker variants). This might rarely include adults who are unable to give informed consent.

Among patients who have received a kidney or liver allograft, those with stable graft function and without severe transplantrelated

complications are eligible for enrollment.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

Infants under 6 months of age

Medically fragile patients who require frequent hospitalizations due to complications of end-stage renal disease (uncontrolled hypertension, severe electrolyte imbalances), hepatic disease (current variceal bleeding, overt encephalopathy, intractable recurrent cholangitis), severe cardiomyopathy as seen in some AS patients, or severe respiratory abnormalities as seen in some JSRD patients with severe brain stem involvement.

Trial design

374 participants in 1 patient group

Ciliopathy
Description:
Children and adults who carry a clinical diagnosis of a known ciliopathy and those patients who have typical features suggestive of a cliopathy but not fulfilling the diagnostic criteria.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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