Clinical Trial: Use of Ravicti™ in Patients With MCAD Deficiency With the 985A>G (K304E) Mutation

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: Use of Glycerol Phenylbutyrate (Ravicti™) as a Chaperone to Stabilize Enzyme in Patients With MCAD Deficiency Due to the Common MCAD 985A>G (K304E) Mutation

Brief Summary: This is a medical research study to test a medication in adult patients with a disease called medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency caused by at least one copy of the 985A>G mutation. The medication is glycerol phenylbutyrate, called Ravicti, which is currently FDA approved for the treatment of urea cycle disorders. Previous research suggests that Ravicti may also be effective in the treatment MCAD deficiency. This study will investigate the safety and efficacy (how well it works) of Ravicti in patients with MCAD deficiency caused by having at least one copy of the 985A>G mutation.

Detailed Summary:

Participation in the study will require one overnight admission and three outpatient visits at the Clinical and Translational Research Center at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC (also called the PCTRC). The total length of the study is 7 weeks.

Subjects will have blood work and an intravenous access line (IV) placed for several blood draws during the visit. Subjects will begin fasting at 8pm during the admission, which means they may consume only non-caloric fluids (water, unsweetened black coffee or tea, or sugar-free beverages). The next morning, fasting blood work will be obtained. The subject can then eat breakfast and will receive the study drug, Ravicti. The total time of fasting will be 12 hours.

Dosing for this study will begin at 2 grams/m2/day, which is about one-fifth (1/5) the dose used for other disorders. The reason for starting the dose lower in MCAD patients is that Ravicti is metabolized by the MCAD enzyme. Following the initial dose, blood will be drawn from the IV every two hours for 8 hours. These blood studies will check the levels of Ravicti in the subject's blood and monitor how the subject's body metabolizes them. The subject will be discharged 8 hours after drug administration. Following discharge, the subject will take Ravicti every day for two weeks.

Visit 2: After two weeks at a dose of 2 grams/m2/day, the subject will fast after 8 PM, and will come to the PCTRC the following morning to have an IV placed and blood draws. If the subject's blood work from the first visit shows that there is no concern, the subject's dose will be increased to 4 grams/m2/day. The subject will receive the first dose at this level in the PCTRC with breakfast, and blood samples will be collected from the IV every 2 hours for the next 8 hours. The subject will c
Sponsor: University of Pittsburgh

Current Primary Outcome: Metabolic stress [ Time Frame: 7 weeks ]

Changes in the assessments of metabolic stress pre- and post-dosing with Ravicti will be the main outcome variable.


Original Primary Outcome: Changes in the assessments of metabolic stress [ Time Frame: 7 weeks ]

Changes in the assessments of metabolic stress (free fatty acids, acylcarnitine intermediates, ketones, fasting glucose, acylglycines) pre- and post-dosing with Ravicti will be the main outcome variable.


Current Secondary Outcome: Pharmacokinetic (pK)analysis [ Time Frame: 7 weeks ]

Results from the pharmacokinetic (pK)analysis (the rate of conversion of the phenylbutyrate to phenylacetate) will also be reviewed to assess for changes pre- and post-dosing with Ravicti as well as changes in these levels at the different doses of Ravicti.


Original Secondary Outcome: Results from the pharmacokinetic (pK)analysis (the rate of conversion of the phenylbutyrate to phenylacetate) [ Time Frame: 7 weeks ]

Results from the pharmacokinetic (pK)analysis (the rate of conversion of the phenylbutyrate to phenylacetate) will also be reviewed to assess for changes pre- and post-dosing with Ravicti as well as changes in these levels at the different doses of Ravicti.

A pre-dose sample will be collected at each visit which will be compared to the post-dosing pK samples to establish the rate at which the subject converts the phenylbutyrate to phenylacetate.



Information By: University of Pittsburgh

Dates:
Date Received: June 13, 2013
Date Started: June 2013
Date Completion:
Last Updated: March 1, 2016
Last Verified: March 2016