Skip to ContentRegistry for Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophy - Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy
Registry for Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophy
The FAIR-DMD registry is a disease-specific, academically managed registry for patients with Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD).
Already in early childhood, affected boys show nonspecific developmental abnormalities, such as delays in speech or cognitive development or delayed achievement of motor milestones. Diagnosis is usually made between the ages of three and five through markedly elevated creatine kinase (CK) levels and molecular genetic analyses. The disease course is progressive: after a plateau phase in the preschool years, increasing muscle weakness-despite corticosteroid therapy-typically leads to loss of ambulation in early adolescence. Secondary complications arise from cardiac and respiratory involvement. Life-limiting factors include progressive cardiomyopathy, cardiac arrhythmias, and global respiratory failure, which usually necessitates non-invasive ventilation in early adulthood.
Currently, 26 specialized treatment centers in Germany and 5 in Austria are participating in the project. In Switzerland, a registry for DBMD patients is already being maintained, the Swiss Registry for Neuromuscular Disorders (Swiss-Reg-NMD). The registry is open to all centers that wish to participate in the future. Within the FAIR-DMD project, interoperability between FAIR-DMD and the Swiss registry is being pursued, and additional disease-specific and academically managed European Duchenne registries could be further developed for future data exchange. Data from patients treated with new disease-modifying therapies – which may in the future alter the progression of DMD and BMD – will also be included in the project.
Aims of the study are:
* Harmonization and standardization of care
* Support and evaluation of new disease-modifying therapies
* Improvement of care quality
* Establishment of the registry as an independent research tool
* Ensuring international cooperation and comparability
* Patient-centered approach and collection of subjective indicators
* Aim for sustainability and implementation into routine care To achieve these aims apart of the registry a telemedicine platform will be implemented. The telemedicine platform consists of a web-based dashboard for study personnel and an app for patients. The app will be used for appointment management, communication with the treating doctor and health care professionals, and to fill out Health Related Quality of Life questionnaires. Data from the telemedicine platform will automatically be transferred to the registry and vice versa.
Another measure in the FAIR-DMD project is to simplify the management of adverse drug reactions (ADR). New therapies are often approved despite very small patient populations in clinical trials. As a result, the majority of knowledge regarding their benefits – but especially their potential risks – emerges only after approval. In the future, as soon as new ADRs occur, they must be managed as effectively as possible, drawing on all available expertise and experience, following a “best practice” approach. Alongside the existing legally mandated ADR reporting procedures to the federal authorities and pharmaceutical companies, the process of digitally supported documentation of the clinical course following the occurrence of an ADR is to be optimized.
In FAIR-DMD it is planned that the report of an occurring ADR shall be automatically forwarded to the relevant authorities through the telemedicine platform, without requiring the same forms to be completed multiple times. To achieve this, we work very closely with the federal authority and pharmaceutical companies.
In addition to these measures FAIR-DMD aims to establish a therapy recommendation board, which also uses the telemedicine platform.
Our mission is to harmonize and standardize care for patients with dystrophinopathies, ensuring high-quality treatment and equitable access. We aim to support and evaluate innovative disease-modifying therapies, establish the registry as an independent research instrument, and foster international collaboration for global comparability. By prioritizing patient-centered approaches and integrating subjective indicators, we strive for sustainability and seamless implementation into routine clinical practice.
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A Gene Transfer Therapy Study to Evaluate the Safety of and Expression From Delandistrogene Moxeparvovec (SRP-9001) in Participants With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)
Actively Recruiting
2+ Years
Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Actively Recruiting
Therapeutic Approach:Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Variant Requirement:Duchenne - variant criteria varies by cohort
A Study to Investigate the Safety and Biodistribution of a Single Intrathecal (IT) Injection of INS1201 in Ambulatory Males With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)
Actively Recruiting
2 Years to <5 Years
Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Actively Recruiting
Therapeutic Approach:Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Variant Requirement:Duchenne - variants in exons 18 to 58
A Gene Transfer Therapy Study to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of Delandistrogene Moxeparvovec (SRP-9001) in Non-Ambulatory and Ambulatory Participants With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)
Active, Not Recruiting
8 Years to 18+ Years
Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Active, Not Recruiting
Therapeutic Approach:Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Variant Requirement:Duchenne - Excluding any deletion of exon 8 and/or 9
Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacodynamic, Efficacy, and Pharmacokinetic Study of DYNE-251 in Participants With Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Amenable to Exon 51 Skipping
Active, Not Recruiting
4 Years to <17 Years
Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Active, Not Recruiting
Therapeutic Approach:Restoring or Replacing Dystrophin
Variant Requirement:Duchenne - amenable to exon 51 skipping