Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT05174559

Additional Dietary Large Neutral Amino Acids (LNAA) for Improved Symptoms in Adult Classical Phenylktonuria (PKU)

Can Care of Adult PKU Be Improved With Additional Dietary Large Neutral Amino Acids: An N-of-1 Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Southern California · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This research investigates the effects of combining a phenylalanine restricted diet (usual care) with LNAA supplementation (adjuvant LNAA) in well-controlled adults with classical PKU. The hypothesis is that symptoms are improved in well-controlled patients who receive adjuvant LNAA therapy compared with diet monotherapy. Six symptomatic classical PKU adults will be enrolled to test the hypothesis in a small series of N-of-1 randomized controlled trials over 18-weeks. All assessments will be collected in patient's homes. A 3-month follow-up period will assess the longer-term effects of adjuvant LNAA in patients who show clinical benefit at the end of the intervention period.

Detailed description

Clinical care of PKU confronts an increasing proportion of early-treated well-controlled adults, with a treatment goal that quality of life be as normal as possible. Even adults who have successfully managed their blood phenylalanine levels from birth can have symptoms which impact daily function. New therapies that target symptoms are needed, especially for symptomatic well-controlled classical adults with few treatment options. In Denmark and the LAC+USC U.S. clinic, adults are offered large neutral amino acid (LNAA) supplements when diet monotherapy becomes less effective for symptom management, or the patient wants a less restrictive diet. Many patients report improved symptoms. LNAA supplementation doesn't significantly reduce blood phenylalanine, suggesting a different mechanism for patient perceived benefits. Both LNAA supplementation and a phenylalanine restricted diet aim to improve brain neurotransmitter biochemistry to optimize outcomes through dietary intervention. The overall objective of this research is to evaluate additional dietary LNAAs on symptom management in adults with classical PKU at an individual level. N-of-1 randomized controlled trials will provide the highest level of evidence. The scientific premise is that manipulation of dietary LNAAs affects blood LNAA concentrations. LNAAs compete with phenylalanine for a shared transporter from blood to brain, dependent on blood concentrations and transporter affinities. Higher blood phenylalanine levels in adult PKU, with high transport affinity, produces excessive phenylalanine brain entry at the expense of other LNAAs. Insufficient LNAAs impairs synthesis of chemicals in the brain (neurotransmitters), a suggested mechanism of action for adult PKU symptoms. Additional dietary LNAAs may help to overcome this limitation of adult usual care. The study uses established PKU treatment products (medical foods) and biomarkers, (1) to determine effect of the adjuvant LNAA diet in symptom management; and (2) to evaluate correlations between changes in biomarkers and changes in symptoms during the intervention. Should findings show additive clinical value of LNAAs to the PKU diet, the strategy may become a useful adjunct. For participants, results will bring them closer to evidence-based individualized care. This work could advance the field closer toward personalized management.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPreKUnil® LNAA Medical Food for PKUPreKUnil® LNAA Medical Food for PKU is a commercially available active LNAA treatment product for PKU. PreKUnil® inactive LNAA is a customized placebo for this research.

Timeline

Start date
2023-09-01
Primary completion
2024-07-31
Completion
2024-07-31
First posted
2021-12-30
Last updated
2023-12-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05174559. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.