Stephen G. Kaler
Stephen G. Kaler
This clinical trial will evaluate the safety, tolerability, dosing, and efficacy of Northera (Droxidopa) in children with Menkes disease aged 7 to 17 years who survived the major neurodegenerative and neurocognitive effects of Menkes disease through early Copper Histidinate treatment. The investigator hypothesizes that Northera (Droxidopa) treatment in pediatric Menkes disease survivors with symptoms of dysautonomia (e.g., syncope, dizziness, orthostatic hypotension, abnormal sinoatrial conduction, and bowel or bladder dysfunction) from deficiency of the cuproenzyme, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, will be safe and will correct or improve blood neurochemical levels, raise systolic blood pressure, and produce symptomatic improvement and a better quality of life. The investigator will test this hypothesis, in six to ten child or adolescent Menkes disease survivors through a placebo-controlled trial to evaluate adverse event rates and whether oral administration of Northera (Droxidopa) at doses established for individual subjects by careful dose titration improves plasma norepinephrine and dihydroxyphenylglycol (DHPG) levels, raises systolic blood pressure, and improves performance on tests of physical exertion. As an exploratory outcome measure, the study will validate the Orthostatic Hypotension Symptom Assessment (OHSA) questionnaire for this population for two four-week periods of either active or placebo treatment. Aim 1. Determine the safety of Droxidopa in Menkes disease pediatric survivors. Aim 2. Determine the efficacy of Droxidopa in Menkes disease survivors. The investigator hypothesizes that low-dose Droxidopa treatment in classic Menkes disease survivors aged 7 to 17 will improve orthostatic hypotension and ameliorate other signs and symptoms of dysautonomia. This pilot study will employ an ascending dose paradigm in a double-blind placebo-controlled randomized crossover design to optimize statistical power and rigorously discern treatment effects on 1) tilt table tests of orthostatic hypotension, 2) systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 3) plasma neurochemical levels and 4) tests of physical exertion. The trial will also validate the Orthostatic Hypotension Symptom Assessment (OHSA) questionnaire for this population of children and adolescents. This study addresses an important unmet clinical need for subjects with a rare disease, Menkes disease.
Minister of Health Disease
Droxidopa Oral Product
Placebo Control
PHASE1
PHASE2
This proposal outlines a concerted effort to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the synthetic amino acid L-threo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine (Droxidopa) for the symptoms of dysautonomia that are common in pediatric survivors of Menkes disease. Classic Menkes disease is a fatal X-linked recessive disorder of copper homeostasis that results from variants in a copper transporter gene, ATP7A, and has an estimated birth prevalence of 1 in 35,000 males. The tragedy of Menkes disease involves the apparent good health of affected infants both prenatally and during the first 6-8 weeks of life, after which signs and symptoms of central nervous system (CNS) degeneration emerge. Our prior clinical research demonstrated that early diagnosis (within approximately 28 days of birth) and three years of daily treatment with subcutaneous injections of Copper Histidinate (NDA #34,166) can extend survival and markedly improve neurodevelopmental and neurocognitive outcomes. However, survivors of the illness's severe CNS effects often develop symptoms of dysautonomia, such as syncope, dizziness, orthostatic hypotension, abnormal sinoatrial conduction, nocturnal bradycardia, and bowel or bladder dysfunction beginning in middle childhood. These problems are caused by partial deficiency of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH), which requires ATP7A to deliver Cu to intracellular compartments for incorporation as its enzymatic cofactor. DBH normally converts dopamine to norepinephrine, and similar symptoms are reported in individuals with congenital absence of DBH, an autosomal recessive disorder. The drug Droxidopa is a synthetic amino acid L-threo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine and can be metabolized by the non-copper dependent enzyme DOPA decarboxylase to produce norepinephrine, bypassing the DBH enzymatic defect. The investigator has demonstrated neurochemical improvements in a mouse model of Menkes disease with this compound, as well as in adult Menkes disease survivors over age 18 in a detailed trial (NCT04977388). The investigator recently developed a new liquid suspension of Droxidopa to test smaller doses in pediatric survivors of Menkes disease in a clinical trial.
| Study Type : | INTERVENTIONAL |
| Estimated Enrollment : | 6 participants |
| Masking : | QUADRUPLE |
| Primary Purpose : | OTHER |
| Official Title : | Phase I/II Study of NORTHERA (DROXIDOPA) for Dysautonomia in Pediatric Survivors of Menkes Disease: Double-blind Placebo-controlled Randomized Crossover Clinical Trial. |
| Actual Study Start Date : | 2026-06-01 |
| Estimated Primary Completion Date : | 2030-06-30 |
| Estimated Study Completion Date : | 2030-06-30 |
Information not available for Arms and Intervention/treatment
| Ages Eligible for Study: | 7 Years to 17 Years |
| Sexes Eligible for Study: | ALL |
| Accepts Healthy Volunteers: |
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RECRUITING
Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University
New York, New York, United States, 10032