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The Gyrate Atrophy Ocular and Systemic Study characterizes the natural history of ornithine levels and retinal degeneration (RD) associated with disease-causing OAT variants in the presence of standard care dietary treatment regimens over 4 years. The research goal is to understand the impact of OAT mutations on plasma ornithine levels and retinal degeneration. Funding Source- FDA OOPD
Full description
Gyrate atrophy is a rare inherited chorioretinal degeneration that is associated with hyperornithinemia, an inborn error of metabolism caused by autosomal recessive mutations in the ornithine aminotransferase (OAT) gene. Gyrate atrophy is characterized by childhood-onset nyctalopia and sharply demarcated areas of chorioretinal atrophy that initially involve the midperipheral fundus. The atrophic areas typically coalesce and enlarge towards the posterior pole in the second and third decades of life, leading to severe visual field constriction and vision loss if left untreated. The current standard care treatment of gyrate atrophy is an arginine restricted diet that is implemented in practice using dietary protein restriction with essential amino acid supplementation. However, dietary treatment is highly burdensome on patients and negatively impacts quality of life such that only about ~20% of patients are able to comply. Strict adherence to dietary protein restriction (particularly through adolescence), essential amino acid supplementation, and nutritional management of body weight especially during intercurrent illness and pregnancy are among the challenges of treatment. Periods of suboptimal dietary control led to plasma ornithine elevation and progressive chorioretinal degeneration.
Investigators are developing gene therapy as a potential one-time treatment that could arrest disease progression while avoiding or reducing the need for dietary treatment. To facilitate a future interventional gene therapy clinical trial, there is a need to evaluate natural history of and the relationship between potential clinical trial outcome measures.
The objectives of the OAT gene natural history study are as follows:
Natural History
Metabolic-Structure-Function Relationships
Identify Rapid Progressors
The expected impact of the OAT gene natural history study is to inform a future interventional clinical trial design and implementation, including the following:
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Inclusion criteria
Must meet one (1) of the Genetic Screening Criteria below:
Note: if a participant has a variant(s) of unknown significance, they will still qualify if they meet the Genetic Screening Criteria above. Ocular Inclusion Criteria Participant must meet the following criteria at the Screening Visit to enroll into the genetic screening phase.
Both eyes must have a clinical diagnosis of retinal dystrophy. Both eyes must permit good quality photographic imaging (e.g., but not limited to, clear ocular media, adequate pupil dilation, stable fixation).
Exclusion criteria
Ocular Exclusion Criteria:
The following medications and treatments are excluded within the specified timeframe:
45 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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