Inherited Cardiac cONditions In Kids
- Conditions
- Cardiovascular DiseasesInherited Cardiac Conditions
- Registration Number
- NCT05158738
- Lead Sponsor
- Imperial College London
- Brief Summary
All patients with heart disease should have the opportunity to participate in research into their condition, to advance knowledge and treatment. The investigators have built an online registry and database - The Heart Hive - to connect research-willing participants (with heart muscle disease) with active researchers and projects. Participants enrol and upload their own data through the website.This study uses The Heart Hive platform to study cardiomyopathies - heart muscle disease. These are progressive diseases, and there is a need to better understand what factors affect the chances of developing cardiomyopathy, and how the condition progresses. The study will collect information about participants diagnosis, DNA for genetic analysis, and then follow participants' clinical progress. The study will identify genetic variants that cause cardiomyopathy, and determine which specific genetic or environmental factors predict disease severity, progression and response to treatment, with an overall objective of identifying new and personalised treatments for patients with this disease.
- Detailed Description
This is a multi-centre, observational study of children with rare inherited cardiac conditions. The focus of the study will be on children with clinically diagnosed cardiomyopathy and their unaffected parents, with collection of baseline demographic data, imaging data, and genotyping data. Children and their parents will been rolled over a 5-year period.
Sub-sets of patients with confirmed diagnoses of other heritable cardiovascular diseases with onset \<16 years will also be recruited.These will include children who following evaluation by their clinical multidisciplinary team (which will include a geneticist or genetic counsellor) are likely to have a rare monogenic condition. Other affected family members of eligible patients may be also invited to participate in the study.
Information for this study will be collected primarily from investigations performed as part of the participants' routine clinical care including whole genome sequencing commissioned by NHS England. The study will seek consent to access and export this data. Procedures performed as part of this study may include venepuncture and/or saliva collection and carry minimal risk to the patient.
Parents of participants that are recruited into the study will donate a blood sample (or saliva sample if unable to provide blood) and consent will be requested for collection of health information and results of relevant investigations carried out as part of their routine clinical care (e.g. an echocardiogram). Other family members that are recruited into the study will donate a blood sample (or saliva sample if unable to provide blood) and consent will be requested for collection of health information. Family members of deceased patients with cardiomyopathy or other inherited cardiac conditions may be asked if they wish to donate stored samples that may have been taken prior to death or as part of a post-mortem examination to establish cause of death. Any discussion with regard to the use of stored samples for this project will be initiated by the clinical care team for the deceased patient and their family to minimise any potential distress to the family. Sub-sets of patients may be asked to donate tissue samples taken as part of their clinical care.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 300
- Males or females with a confirmed diagnosis of childhood onset (<16 years) PCM
- Males or females with childhood onset (<16 years) of a rare inherited cardiac condition likely to be a monogenic condition
- Capacity for parents to provide informed consent
- Genotype negative following local standard diagnostic ICC gene panel
- Family members of patients with ICC, both affected and unaffected
- Parents who lack capacity to provide consent on behalf of their children/themselves
- Onset over 16 years
- Significant teratogen exposure (including maternal diabetes) likely to contribute to cardiac dysfunction (following discussion with Cardiologist)
- Significant coronary heart disease likely to contribute to cardiac dysfunction (following discussion with Cardiologist)
- Other secondary causes of cardiac dysfunction likely to explain the phenotype of the patient
- Patients with a confirmed genetic diagnosis (patients with variants of uncertain significance are not excluded).
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Primary outcome measures 5 years Identification of novel genetic variants associated with disease status or outcome
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (3)
Harefield Hospital
🇬🇧Uxbridge, United Kingdom
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children
🇬🇧London, United Kingdom
Royal Brompton Hospital
🇬🇧London, United Kingdom