Biological Variation of Phenylalanine in Patients With Hyperphenylalaninemia
NCT ID: NCT01869972
Last Updated: 2015-12-11
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
32 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2013-05-31
2015-12-31
Brief Summary
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The investigators will look at the variation in blood phenylalanine level over 24 hours to see how much the level changes. The investigators will measure this in patients with typical PKU who are compliant with the diet and in patients who are not compliant with the diet. The investigators will also measure this in patients with "mild" PKU who do not usually have as high levels of phenylalanine. Finally, the investigators will see if patients on sapropterin have lower variation.
Detailed Description
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With population-based detection of hyperphenylalaninemia, it soon became apparent that there was significant biological variation of phenylalanine levels between patients (i.e. inter-individual biological variation) with phenylketonuria (PKU) and this now forms part of the classification system for hyperphenylalaninemia (i.e. benign hyperphenylalaninemia, mild, moderate or classical phenylketonuria). While variations of the classification system exist, most commonly "classical" PKU refers to individuals with plasma phenylalanine levels greater than 1200 µmol/L on an unrestricted diet. "Moderate" PKU refers to levels between 900 and 1200 µmol/L, while "mild" PKU refers to levels between 600 and 900 µmol/L. "Non-PKU" or "benign" hyperphenylalaninemia refers to phenylalanine levels less than 600 µmol/L on an unrestricted diet, that while greater than normal phenylalanine levels (\< 100 µmol/L), historically have not been prescribed dietary restriction of phenylalanine. This inter-individual variation is generally due to variable residual enzyme activity and genotype in PKU patients.
Intra-individual variation (the changes of phenylalanine levels in one individual) has been observed by all clinicians who treat PKU. While some of this variation is simply the expression of the underlying genotype when a patient's dietary phenylalanine level exceeds prescribed amounts (i.e. "cheating" on their diet), other variation represents shifts from anabolic to catabolic states in a diurnal pattern or during intercurrent illness. While overall exposure to high phenylalanine has long been known to adversely affect IQ scores, recently increased variability in phenylalanine levels has been reported to be linked to lower IQ, highlighting the importance of improving our understanding of intra-individual variation.
New treatments for PKU, therefore, need to be assessed in terms of their effect on biological variation of phenylalanine. Sapropterin dihydrochloride (KuvanTM) is a small molecule drug that can lower phenylalanine levels in patients with phenylalanine hydroxylase deficiency by a direct interaction with the enzyme . The pharmacokinetics of KuvanTM have been evaluated in adults and are undergoing evaluation in pediatric patients, however, the biological effect of KuvanTM in terms of lowering of blood phenylalanine levels would be expected to have a longer profile than the blood levels of the drug itself because the half-life of the activated enzyme would be longer. This suggests that KuvanTM may have a modulating effect on variation of blood phenylalanine levels in PKU patients.
In this observational study, the investigators will directly measure the short-term biological variation of blood phenylalanine in hyperphenylalaninemic patients by frequent measurements of phenylalanine levels over a 24 hour period. The investigators will enroll subjects already followed at one of the two study sites who are treated by diet alone or who are treated with KuvanTM therapy (+/- diet). During the 24 hour period subjects will be asked to maintain their typical diet/therapy.
Hypothesis: Biological variation will be less in KuvanTM treated patients than in classical phenylketonuria treated by diet alone.
OBJECTIVES:
Determine short-term biologic variation in people with hyperphenylalaninemia, with and without KuvanTM therapy.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Wide PHE group
Subjects prescribed diet alone to treat their PKU who have \>1/3 of monitoring phenylalanine levels (with at least 3 levels measured) outside the target treatment range in the 6 months preceding enrolment. Target therapeutic range is 120 - 360 umol/L for age \<12 years and 120 - 600 umol/L for age ≥ 12 years.
No interventions assigned to this group
Target PHE group
Subjects prescribed diet alone to treat their PKU who have ≤ 1/3 of monitoring phenylalanine levels (with at least 3 levels measured) outside the target treatment range in the 6 months preceding enrolment. Target therapeutic range is 120 - 360 umol/L for age \<12 years and 120 - 600 umol/L for age ≥ 12 years.
No interventions assigned to this group
Kuvan(TM) group
Subjects on Kuvan(TM) (any dose for at least 3 months with no dosage change for most recent 1 month) ± diet therapy
No interventions assigned to this group
Control group
Subjects with non-PKU hyperphenylalaninemia (maximum phenylalanine level 120 - 599 umol/L on no therapy).
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Pregnancy
* Other specific PKU therapies, including enzyme replacement therapy or any amino acid supplement designed to block uptake or transport of phenylalanine (i.e. large neutral amino acid mixtures)
* Any intercurrent illness within the previous 5 days (any of fever, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased intake, upper respiratory tract infection).
4 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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McMaster Children's Hospital
OTHER
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario
OTHER
BioMarin Pharmaceutical
INDUSTRY
Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Murray Potter, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation
Locations
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McMaster Children's Hospital
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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PKUvar-01
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id