Assessment of Safety of the Use of Fenfluramine in Children With Dravet Syndrome Under the Age of 24 Months

Status: Recruiting
Location: See all (3) locations...
Intervention Type: Drug
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Phase 4
SUMMARY

Dravet syndrome is a genetic epilepsy associated with pathogenic variants in SCN1A that codes for Nav1.1, a protein necessary for sodium channels. Children with Dravet syndrome classically present in the first year of life with prolonged seizures, often hemiclonic and in the setting of fever or temperature changes such as getting in or out of bath water. Many anti-seizure medications are sodium channel blockers and exacerbate seizures in this patient population. This creates some limitations in medication choices for this patient population. Recently fenfluramine was approved for use in Dravet syndrome for people 2 years and older. Randomized studies demonstrated a 74.9% reduction of convulsive motor seizures compared to 19.2% in the placebo group. Additionally, 16% of children treated with fenfluramine were seizure free. Fenfluramine is likely to be as effective in children under the age of 2 years. The current study has proposed a treatment protocol to allow access to fenfluramine for children under 24 months of age.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 1
Maximum Age: 2
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

⁃ Treating physicians must submit a clinical statement of potential benefit to the lead site for review of the multi-PIs, which includes patient's gender, age, diagnosis, genetic pathogenic variant, co-morbidities, seizure history, prior and current therapies, response to prior therapies and reason for request. Echocardiogram (ECHO) results must also be submitted to the lead site prior to final approval. Patients must be between 12 and 23 months old to be eligible. Each subject will be reviewed by the multi-PIs to ensure agreement that the subject has Dravet syndrome. Additional inclusion criteria:

• SCN1A with a known or presumed pathogenic variant or VUS with a history of prolonged seizure or a clinical diagnosis of Dravet syndrome.

• Failure of at least one anti-seizure medication that is not a sodium channel blocker (lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine, carbamazepine, eslicarbazepine)

Locations
United States
California
University of California San Francisco
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
San Francisco
Colorado
Children's Hospital Colorado
RECRUITING
Aurora
Minnesota
Mayo Clinic
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Rochester
Contact Information
Primary
Rebecca Rochowiak
rebecca.rochowiak@childrenscolorado.org
720-777-0717
Time Frame
Start Date: 2024-10-22
Estimated Completion Date: 2027-07
Participants
Target number of participants: 12
Treatments
Experimental: Fenfluramine
The dose of FENFLURAMINE for the duration of the Treatment Period will range from 0.2 mg/kg/day to a maximum of 0.7 mg/kg/day, not to exceed a total daily dose of 26 mg/day; for patients concurrently being prescribed stiripentol, the maximum will be 0.4 mg/kg/day, not to exceed a total daily dose of 17 mg/day.~Under this treatment plan, FENFLURAMINE will be administered twice daily in equally divided doses, with at least 8 hours and no more than 12 hours between doses in a single day.
Sponsors
Collaborators: UCB Pharma
Leads: University of Colorado, Denver

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov