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Alport Therapy Registry - European Initiative Towards Delaying Renal Failure in Alport Syndrome

Alport Therapy Registry - European Initiative Towards Delaying Renal Failure in Alport Syndrome

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Overview

The hereditary type IV collagen disease Alport syndrome leads to kidney failure early in life. Currently there are no specific medications approved for treatment, however, several therapies have been evaluated preclinically and could improve outcome. For that reason, this non-interventional, observational study investigates, if medications (1) delay disease progression; (2) delay time to kidney failure; (3) improve life-expectancy compared to untreated patients (relatives). This observational study started in 2006 as an European registry. Since 2019, this registry has been expanded to "Alport XXL" via the International Alport Alliance as a global effort across all continents. From 2020 on to present, "Alport XXL" has a special focus on the outcomes of early therapy in young patients on ACE-inhibitors vs. Angiotensin-receptor blockers vs. their combination.

Description

Early diagnosis in children with Alport syndrome (AS) with isolated hematuria opens a "window of opportunity" for early intervention. In the Alport mouse-model, this early intervention with the ACE-inhibitor Ramipril let to a delay of kidney failure by 111%. In order to observe treatment approaches for AS in humans, this registry has been established in 2006 to collect data over several generations of Alport families across Europe. In the meantime, this registry has been expanded to "Alport XXL" via the International Alport Alliance as a global effort across all continents.

Small children with AS first develop microscopic hematuria (stage 0), proceeding to microalbuminuria (stage I), overt proteinuria (stage II), impaired kidney function (stage III) and finally can end up with kidney failure (stage IV), leading to impaired quality of life and premature death (stage V). This registry uses these stages to assess if earlier initiation of medications such as ACE-inhibition at earlier stages of disease is more effective than later therapy in delaying the time to disease progression (doubeling or tripeling of albuminuria), delaying loss of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and if therapy improves life-expectancy.

Untreated children with autosomal-recessive AS, digenic AS, and boys with X-linked AS typically all develop kidney failure early in life. Untreated girls with X-linked AS have a 30-40% risk of kidney failure, typically later in life (40 years or older). Untreated heterozygous patients with COL4A3/COL4A4 variants typically have a less severe phenotype (in former times also called "familial benign hematuria" or "thin basement membrane nephropathy" (TBMN)) and a 1-2% risk of kidney failure.

Several interim results of this registry have been published since 2012.

Alport XXL is designed and conducted as strictly observational, non-interventional data acquisition with prospective (and in parts retrospective) data analysis. Young patients with AS in disease stages 0,I,II from all over the world are included. The renewed version from 2021 has been re-approved by the Ethics Committee of the University Medical Center Göttingen as "Alport XXL", a further development of the former European Alport Therapy Registry (AZ 10/11/06). "Alport XXL" registry and data storage are in conformity with Good Clinical Practice guidelines.

ICH-GCP-conform patient information and data exchange is secured by data transfer and cooperation agreements between all international trial centers and the coordinating principal investigator at University Medical Center Goettingen. At baseline, data collection including retrospective data is performed using a standardized, ICH-GCP-conform and pseudonymized questionnaire assessing age, sex, weight, height, mode of inheritance (X-linked, autosomal, compound heterozygous/homozygous, number of missense variants), family history, albumin in 24-hour or spontaneous urine, serum-creatinine, RAS-blockade with preparation and dose. Follow-up visits include same data than baseline plus blood-pressure, smoking-status, serum-potassium, eGFR, hearing loss and eye involvement, other symptoms such as leiomyomatosis, comorbidities and adverse events (adverse events of special interest defined as hyperkalemia, cough, hypotension, acute renal failure, malignancy, death).

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

Diagnosis of Alport syndrome (AS) by kidney biopsy or mutation analysis (or both).

Any type of genetic variant is accepted for X-linked, autosomal or digenic Alport syndrome (COL4A3, 4 or 5 genes).

Exclusion criteria:

Patients not willing to give informed consent. Patient with suspected diagnosis, whcih cannot be confirmed.

Study details
    Alport Syndrome
    Hereditary Kidney Disease
    Pediatric Kidney Disease
    Thin Basement Membrane Disease
    Familial Benign Hematuria

NCT02378805

University Hospital Goettingen

15 May 2026

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