Official Title
Craniosynostosis Network
Brief Title
Network Of Clinical Research Studies On Craniosynostosis, Skull Malformations With Premature Fusion Of Skull Bones
Protocol ID
NCT03025763
Lead Sponsor
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Brief Summary
Craniosynostosis (CS) is a common malformation occurring in ~4 per 10,000 live births in
which the sutures between skull bones close too early, causing long-term problems with
brain and skull growth. Infants with CS typically require extensive surgical treatment
and may experience many perioperative complications, including hemorrhage and
re-synostosis. Even with successful surgery, children can experience developmental and
learning disabilities or vision problems. Most often, CS appears as isolated nonsyndromic
CS (NSC). Of the several subtypes of CS, unilateral or bilateral fusion of the coronal
suture is the second most common form of CS accounting for 20-30% of all NSC cases. The
etiology of coronal NSC (cNSC) is not well understood, although the published literature
suggests that it is a multifactorial condition. About 5-14% of coronal craniosynostosis
patients have a positive family history, with a specific genetic etiology identified in
>25% of cNSC cases, suggesting a strong genetic component in the pathogenesis of this
birth defect. The causes for cNSC and its phenotypic heterogeneity remain largely
unknown. An international team of investigators will generate large genomic and gene
expression datasets on samples from patients with cNSC. State-of-the-art imaging,
genetic, and developmental and systems biology approaches will be used to quantitatively
model novel pathways and networks involved in the development of cNSC. Novel variant-,
gene- and network-level analyses will be performed on the genomic data obtained from cNSC
cases, their relatives, and controls to identify novel variants and genetic regions
associated with cNCS. Quantitative, analytical, and functional validations of these
predictions will provide insights into the etiology and possible therapeutic targets for
CS and potentially other bone-related disorders.
Detailed Description
The long-term goal of the Program Project, Craniosynostosis Network, is to elucidate
normal and abnormal craniofacial biology to ultimately improve the treatment of
craniofacial disorders. Craniosynostosis and other skull abnormalities are among the most
common human malformations usually requiring surgical and medical intervention. The
Network will integrate three projects and two cores. Scientists with diverse expertise
including anthropology, morphometry, imaging, birth defects, developmental biology,
genetics, genomics, epidemiology, statistics, and systems biology will explore the
determinants of the fate of the relevant mesenchymal progenitor cells, abnormalities in
osteogenesis that contribute to global skull growth abnormality and premature closure of
cranial sutures, especially the coronal suture. High quality genomic data will be
obtained from patients with coronal nonsyndromic craniosynostosis (cNSC) and their
available parents. Novel genome-wide variant-, gene- and network-level analyses will be
performed on these families to identify novel variants and genetic regions associated
with coronal craniosynostosis.
This study is a multi-center, open-enrollment, retrospective study, employing both
family-based and case-control study designs.
Approximately 4000 cNSC patients, their family members, and controls will be recruited by
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the majority will be recruited from the more
than 10 collaborating institutions worldwide.
Study Period
-
Enrollment Count
2,145 participants
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Cases with diagnosis of coronal
- Unaffected relatives of cases
- Unaffected controls including those who may have undergone clinically indicated
craniofacial surgery for trauma or conditions other than craniosynostosis or bone
disease. These individuals will be recruited at some of the other collaborating
institutions, but not at Mount Sinai.
Individuals of any racial or ethnic group with the established or suspected clinical
diagnosis of coronal, nonsyndromic craniosynostosis will be included in this study.
Unaffected relatives, such as their biological parents and/or sibs, will also be included
to contribute medical information and samples as negative controls for our study.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Those who fit the criteria, but who choose not to participate
- Those who do not meet the criteria.
- Other than children, no vulnerable individuals will be recruited, such as
intellectual impaired individuals or prisoners.
Filters
Craniosynostosis
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
CHILD
ADULT
OLDER_ADULT