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Active clinical trials for "Genetic Diseases, Inborn"

Results 161-170 of 266

Genetic Screening and Assisted Oocyte Activation in Couples With Diminished/Aberrant Embryonic Development....

EmbryoEmbryo Disorder1 more

This is an interventional comparative study at the Department of Reproductive Medicine at Ghent University Hospital. Patients with previous embryo developmental problems are eligible for the study. Patients will undergo an ICSI-AOA treatment and will also be screened for genes important in the oocyte activation and embryonic development process. Also, the calcium releasing pattern of the patients' spermatozoa will be investigated.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Embryo Health Study

InfertilityHereditary Diseases

This study intends to determine the patients' perception and motivation to obtain additional information on their preimplantation embryos' risks of polygenic disorders. Patients undergoing IVF and genetic testing on their embryos for aneuploidies will be given the option to obtain information of their embryos' polygenic disease risk after receiving genetic counseling.

Active3 enrollment criteria

Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplantation for the Treatment of Genetic Disorders of Erythropoiesis...

Genetic DisordersSickle Cell Anemia

The purpose of this study is to determine and confirm the role of bone marrow transplantation in the treatment of disorders of the red cell and hemoglobin including sickle cell anemia, thalassemia and diamond blackfan anemia.

Completed27 enrollment criteria

iKnow: A Prospective Study to Evaluate the Use of Multi-omics in Multi-System, Early Onset Disorders...

Genetic Disease

Prospective observational study to further understand the value that a multi-omic approach has in individuals with a multi system, early onset disorder that does not have a molecular diagnosis by whole genome sequencing.

Active22 enrollment criteria

Pilot Study of Cardiac MR in Patients With Muscular Dystrophy

Muscular DystrophiesCardiac Fibrosis3 more

Muscular Dystrophy can affect the skeletal muscles and also the heart and breathing muscles, causing significant morbidity and mortality. As patients are now living longer, treatment of muscular dystrophies involves drugs that help improve heart function. However, better types of heart imaging studies are needed to understand how these treatments work. Researchers want to improve heart imaging to identify earlier indicators of heart dysfunction in muscular dystrophy patients and how these are changed by medical treatment. The new imaging indicators will also help identify candidates for entry into future clinical trials.

Active19 enrollment criteria

Growth Response in Girls With Turner Syndrome

Genetic DisorderTurner Syndrome

This trial is conducted in Europe. The aim of the trial is to evaluate growth response of two somatropin dose regimens in girls with Turner Syndrome.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

NYCKidSeq: Incorporating Genomics Into Clinical Care of Diverse NYC Children

Genetic DiseasesInborn1 more

The NYCKidSeq program will significantly advance the implementation of genomic medicine, particularly for children, young adults and their families in Harlem and the Bronx. The study will assess the clinical utility of genomic medicine in three broad areas of pediatric disorders, while engaging a range of providers and community advisors to overcome the well-documented barriers to inclusion of underserved and underrepresented populations in genomic research. The study will also include testing, analyzing, and implementing a novel communication tool, Genomic Understanding, Information and Awareness (GUÍA), to facilitate the return of genomic test results. The use of GUÍA will enhance the understanding of these genomic testing results by families, patients, and care providers at all levels of expertise, in two health systems. Healthcare system leadership will be engaged to provide insights into their readiness for genomic implementation. Overall, the NYCKidSeq program will inform the genomics and clinical communities about how to implement genomic medicine in a diverse population in a clinically useful, technologically savvy, culturally sensitive, and ethically sound manner.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

DHA and X-Linked Retinitis Pigmentosa

Retinitis PigmentosaX-linked Genetic Diseases

Purpose: Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is characterized by progressive loss of visual function due to specific genetic mutations. This trial is focused on patients with one of the most severe forms of the disease, X-linked inherited RP (XLRP). This disease is characterized by early onset (typically loss of night vision as a child) followed by loss of peripheral vision as a teenager and young adult. There is no male-to-male transmission of the disease in the family. There is no cure for RP and treatment options are limited. Two clinical trials have not found a benefit from nutritional supplementation with the long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), at low daily doses although there is evidence that it slows disease progression in certain instances. In this clinical trial, we propose that a high dose nutritional DHA supplement will slow the loss of visual function and preserve usable vision in patients with XLRP. This study is a 4-year placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial meaning that patients have a 50-50 chance of receiving placebo or experimental treatment. A total of 66 patients will be enrolled; 33 will receive placebo and 33 will receive the treatment. Entry criteria include diagnosis of XLRP by an ophthalmologist, age 7 to 32 years, male, sufficient visual function such that disease progression can be followed for the entire duration of the trial, and a willingness to visit the testing site (Dallas, TX) once a year. Annual visual function testing includes ETDRS visual acuity, full-field and multifocal electroretinography (ERG), static peripheral visual fields, and fundus photography. Cone ERG function is the primary outcome measure. Funding Source - FDA, Foundation Fighting Blindness, DSM Nutritionals

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Genomic Sequencing in Acutely Ill Neonates

Diseases/DiagnosesGenetic Disease

The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of rapid next generation sequencing (NGS, such as whole genome sequencing1) with current practice to provide diagnostic or prognostic information or treatment guidance in acutely ill neonates and infants, particularly with respect to clinical care, cost and outcomes.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

BSEP Function Rescue During Childhood Inhereditary Cholestatic Diseases

Hereditary DiseasesCholestasis1 more

The purpose of the study is to improve the prognosis of inhereditary cholestasis caused by ABCB11 gene mutations by using BSEP function rescue drugs

Withdrawn12 enrollment criteria
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