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About
This study is based on the hypothesis that a new drug N-carbamylglutamate (Carbaglu®) will enhance the ability of the liver to dispose of toxic ammonia which accumulates in several metabolic diseases including urea cycle disorders and organic acid disorders.
Full description
Hyperammonemia associated with several rare inherited disorders frequently causes mental retardation, developmental disabilities and death. The overall goal of this study is to investigate the short-term efficacy and safety of the orphan drug, N-Carbamyl-L-glutamate (Carbaglu®, abbreviated as NCG), for the treatment of hyperammonemia in rare inherited disorders: carbamyl phosphate synthetase I (CPSI) deficiency, NAGS deficiency, ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, propionic acidemia (PA) and methylmalonic acidemia (MMA).
The primary aims are:
The hypothesis is that ureagenesis capacity as evidenced by [13C] incorporation into urea is deficient in each of these five disorders and that treatment with NCG will improve or restore ureagenesis in patients affected by them. The study will be conducted in the General Clinical Research Centers (GCRC) of the Children's National Medical Center, Washington, D.C. and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Patients (1 day to 70 years of age) with any of the five disorders are eligible for the study. They will all be tested in a short-term trial using surrogate markers (incorporation of [13C] label from Na-acetate into urea, and plasma levels of ammonia, urea and glutamine) before and immediately following 3 days of treatment with NCG. The patients will also be evaluated for short-term safety of NCG using clinical and laboratory parameters. The results of this study will provide important efficacy data, which should help to bring Carbaglu®) to the US market for the benefit of patients with any of these orphan diseases found to be responsive to NCG in this trial.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Between 1 day - 70 years of age
Viable neonates, neonates with uncertain viability are excluded Diagnosed with one of the following five inborn errors of metabolism: NAGS, CPSI,PA, MMA, or OTC deficiency.
Diagnostic requirements:
NAGS deficiency - Identification of pathogenic mutation and/or decreased (<20% of control) NAGS enzyme activity in liver
CPSI deficiency - decreased (<20% of control) CPSI enzyme activity in liver deficiency of liver CPSI in the presence of normal or substantial activity of OTC (Tuchman et al 1980) and/or molecular confirmation of deleterious mutations (Summary et al 2003).
High level of clinical suspicion of NAGS or CPSI deficiency - Failure to meet diagnostic criteria for either NAGS or CPSI deficiency as listed above, but:
OTC deficiency- Identification of pathogenic mutation and/or-pedigree analysis consistent with familial hyperammonemia segregating in an x-linked semi-dominant pattern and/or -<20% of control OTC activity in liver and/or -elevated urinary orotate (>20%umol/mmol creatinine) after allopurinol challenge test
PA and MMA- diagnostic urine organic acid analysis and confirmation of absence of responsiveness to biotin and vitamin B12 respectively.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
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52 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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