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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03722212

Early Diagnosis of the GLUT1 Deficiency Syndrome With a Blood Based Test

Evaluation of METAglut1 Diagnostic Test Performances in Patients With a Clinical Suspicion of GLUT1 Deficiency Syndrome

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
636 (actual)
Sponsor
METAFORA biosystems · Industry
Sex
All
Age
3 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study aims at validating the diagnostic performances of the METAglut1, a blood in vitro diagnostic test, for the simple and early diagnosis of the Glut1 deficiency syndrome (Glut1DS, or De Vivo disease). The blood test will be carried out prospectively on patients presenting with a clinical suspicion of Glut1DS, blindly from the reference strategy, which consists in a lumbar puncture for glycorrhachia measurement, completed by a molecular analysis. The study will be conducted in more than 40 centers in France on up to 3,000 patients for 2 years.

Detailed description

The Glut1 Deficiency Syndrome (Glut1DS) is a debilitating, proteiform neurometabolic disorder caused by an impairment in the glucose transporter Glut1 at the cell surface. Patients suffer from seizures, movement disorders and intellectual disabilities. A timely diagnosis is of prime importance as this haploinsufficiency can be improved by the so-called ketogenic diet. By diagnosing Glut1DS early, based on symptoms associated with Glut1DS, healthcare providers can prescribe the Keto diet therapy early in the disease progression, which could prevent impairment of central nervous system function caused by the disease. Therefore, an early diagnosis of Glut1DS for its treatment is crucial. Currently, the disease is very difficult to diagnose correctly and in a timely manner. The current diagnosis practice requires a lumbar puncture in order to determine if hypoglycorrhachia occurs. The diagnosis result is then supported by the detection of a heterozygous pathogenic variant in slc2a1 gene. This diagnosis procedure is time consuming, expensive, and requires a geneticist's data interpretation. Currently, ketogenic diet therapy is the most efficient therapy for Glut1DS. METAglut1 is a first-in-kind IVD device used to aid in the diagnosis of the Glut1 Deficiency Syndrome (Glut1DS) by quantifying the cell surface expression level of the glucose transporter 1 (Glut1) on circulating human red blood cells. The METAglut1 IVD is primarily intended for use in pediatric patients older than 3 months, of both sexes, of any ethnic origin. The METAglut1 IVD may also be used to aid in the diagnosis of Glut1DS in adults with late onset symptoms. The METAglut1 IVD is authorized for marketing in the European Union pursuant to the CE mark and is currently being distributed in France. The study aims to validate the diagnostic performances of METAglut1. It will last for 2 years, more than 40 centers will participate in the study across France. Up to 3,000 patients with symptoms compatible with Glut1DS will be included prospectively; each of them will be tested for METAglut1, in parallel and blindly of the reference strategy. The METAglut1 test is performed by Laboratoire CERBA (Saint-Ouen l'Aumône, France). A retrospective cohort of already diagnosed patients will also be analyzed to add more data. Concordance analysis with the glycorrhachia, the first biochemical dosage involved in the reference strategy, will be performed, and overall diagnostic performances of METAglut1 calculated. Before to start analysis, a thorough data management plan was implemented with on-site monitoring, automated controls of eCRF and recoding after queries and data reviewing.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTMETAglut1A blood draw is performed on each patient for the METAglut1 test, and sent to Laboratoire CERBA, Saint-Ouen l'Aumône, France, for sample analysis.

Timeline

Start date
2018-09-24
Primary completion
2021-03-31
Completion
2021-07-09
First posted
2018-10-26
Last updated
2022-12-01

Locations

28 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03722212. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.