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Restricting dietary lysine intake in infants from age 3 months or less with confirmed diagnosis of pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy due to Antiquitin (ATQ) deficiency will: reduce the accumulation of neurotoxic substratesα-aminoadipicsemialdehydeandits cyclic equivalent 1-piperideine-6-carboxylate;and will improve overall neurodevelopmental outcome at 3 years of age by acting as an effective intervention into the complex pathophysiology of the condition.
Full description
I Purpose: The purpose of this multi-centre study is to further assess the safety and efficacy of the proposed lysine restricted diet in confirmed ATQ deficient PDE patients.
II Hypothesis: Restricting dietary lysine intake in infants from age 3 months or less with confirmed diagnosis of pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy due to Antiquitin (ATQ) deficiency will: reduce the accumulation of neurotoxic substratesα-aminoadipicsemialdehydeandits cyclic equivalent 1-piperideine-6-carboxylate;and will improve overall neurodevelopmental outcome at 3 years of age by acting as an effective intervention into the complex pathophysiology of the condition.
III Justification: We hope that participants have a much improved chance to avoid the same degree of developmental delay and associated problems. If this study demonstrates a significant improvement of normal development and proves to be safe to use this would provide a positive benefit to the child, the families involved as well as decreasing the burden on the health care system which currently must provide for life long care of these affected children.
IV Objectives: To determine the safety and efficacy of the lysine restricted diet on numerous primary and secondary outcome measures as listed in the protocol. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate neurodevelopmental outcome based on neuropsychological assessments using Bayley-III.
V Research Method:
Efficacy:
Primary Outcomes
Safety:
Primary Outcomes
VI Statistical Analysis:
I. OVERALL STUDY DESIGN Structure: We will conduct a multicenter, open label, negative-controlled observational cohort study to assess the safety and the efficacy on neurodevelopmental outcome of early dietary lysine restriction as an adjunct to pyridoxine therapy for infants with pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy resulting from ATQ deficiency.
Treatment Exposure: Patients receiving a lysine restricted diet adjunct to pyridoxine therapy will be considered as participants in the 'exposure'/test group and patients on pyridoxine mono-therapy will be participants in the 'control' group. The ratio of test participants to controls in the study will be 1:2.
Duration: All participants will be monitored for safety and neurodevelopmental outcome until the age of 3 years.
Efficacy & Safety Analysis: Data will be summarized with descriptive statistics, frequency tabulations, and data listings. Analyses include comparison of treatment effect before and after diet restriction within each participant, and comparison between test and control groups. Analysis will be performed on intent-to-treat population including all enrolled participants. The primary objective of this study is to evaluate neurodevelopmental outcome based on neuropsychological assessments using Bayley-III. The evaluation comprises the following scales: Cognitive Scale, Language Composite Scale with Receptive and Expressive Language subscales, and Motor Composite Scale with Fine- and Gross-Motor subscales. A composite score of all the scales gives the total developmental index. For the composite score and each scale, a hypothesis test can be performed to compare test group and the control group. A 2-sided 95% confidence interval for the mean change in Treatment minus mean change in control groups will be calculated for the total developmental index and each individual scale of Bayley-III to evaluate any particular nonnegative quantity of clinical interest. Similar analysis using appropriate parametric (ANOVA, ANCOVA, Fishers exact test) and nonparametric tests (Wilcoxon rank sum test) will be done for all efficacy and safety outcomes. Severity and relationship to treatment of the adverse events will be summarized.
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Inclusion criteria
Diagnosis of pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy based on clinical symptoms and elevated levels of plasma or urine AASA. Confirmation by at least one known disease causing mutation in the ALDH7A1 gene to be obtained within one month of enrollment.
Participant is male or female <3 years of age.
Participant is managed with a vitamin B6 dose of 15-30 mg/kg/day continuously beginning at < 3 months age, and willing to maintain this dose for the study duration.
Participants must have been offered dietary lysine restriction as adjunct therapy as part of standard clinical care.
Parent(s) or guardian(s) is willing and able to provide written informed consent after the nature of the study has been explained, and prior to any research-related procedures.
Exclusion criteria
Diagnosis is not confirmed: Participant does not have a mutation in the ALDH7A1 gene.
Participant was treated prenatally for PDE with pyridoxine (i.e. mother was on pyridoxine)
Timing of dietary restriction: Participant is on a lysine-restricted diet from an age > 3months.
Confounding factors:
A known allergy or sensitivity to any component of the products commonly used in a lysine-restricted diet or to other products associated with lysine restriction or any other products associated with general study procedures.
Participant is on oral folinic acid and/or pyridoxal phosphate treatment at study entrance.
Participant has any condition or situation which, in the investigator's opinion, places the patient at significant risk of adverse events, or may interfere significantly with their participation and compliance in the study.
0 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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