Summary

Location
at UC Irvine
Dates
study started
study ends around

Description

Summary

The Collaboration for Down Syndrome Progress (CDP) is a long-term study that follows people with Down syndrome of all ages. The goal is to better understand their health, development, and everyday experiences over time. Participants and their caregivers will answer questions, share medical information, and may give samples like blood or saliva. Some participants may also take part in optional activities such as sleep studies, movement tracking, or brain imaging. By collecting the same types of information at many sites, the CDP will help researchers learn why certain health conditions are more common in people with Down syndrome and how to improve care and quality of life.

Official Title

The INCLUDE (INvestigation of Co-occurring Conditions Across the Lifespan to Understand Down Syndrome) Project's Collaboration for Down Syndrome Progress (CDP) Program

Details

The Collaboration for Down Syndrome Progress (CDP) is a multisite, prospective longitudinal cohort designed to systematically characterize health, neurodevelopmental, neurobehavioral, and biological trajectories in individuals with Down syndrome across the lifespan. The CDP establishes a harmonized data collection framework implemented across U.S. and international clinical research sites to generate a large, integrated dataset suitable for cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses.

Participants undergo standardized assessments that include medical history, neurobehavioral evaluations, physical examinations, and review of electronic health records. Biospecimens-including blood, saliva, and tongue swabs-are collected to support genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, and microbiome analyses. These samples are processed and stored within the Down Syndrome Biorepository for current and future research use.

The CDP also incorporates several optional subsample studies that provide deeper phenotyping in key domains relevant to co-occurring conditions in Down syndrome. These include home sleep apnea testing, wearable activity monitoring, neuroimaging using MRI, and metabolic and endocrine laboratory profiling. Each subsample follows additional standardized procedures to ensure comparability across sites.

All data generated through the CDP are curated and transferred to the NIH INCLUDE Data Hub, where they are made available in de identified form to qualified researchers. The resulting dataset is intended to advance understanding of co-occurring conditions, identify risk and resilience factors, and inform the development of evidence-based clinical practices and future therapeutic interventions for individuals with Down syndrome.

Keywords

Down Syndrome, Chromosome Disorders, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, Developmental Disabilities

Eligibility

You can join if…

To be considered potentially eligible for this CDP, a participant must meet the following criteria:

  • Diagnosis of Down syndrome (with the exception of control participants for the Subsample study on Imaging). We will be enrolling participants with all types of Down syndrome including standard Trisomy 21, mosaic Down syndrome, and translocations.
  • Primary language is English, Spanish, or Portuguese.

Support Person

  • Able to attend in-person or remote visits.
  • Able to provide accurate information about the study participant's clinical outcomes and family history.
  • Primary language is English, Spanish, or Portuguese.

Biological parent(s) biospecimen collection

  • Biological parent of the enrolled participant.
  • Willing to provide a biological sample.
  • Primary language is English, Spanish, or Portuguese. Imaging subsample study controls
  • A subset of controls will be enrolled to match a cohort of individuals who take part in the CDP Subsample Study on imaging. Healthy control infants must be born at greater than 36 weeks gestational age and must have at least one older sibling. The sibling criterion allows comparability for potential analyses combining control data from DS-CDP with analogous control data previously collected by IBIS for other neurodevelopmental studies.

You CAN'T join if...

  • A participant will also be excluded if a healthcare professional determines that CDP involvement poses a risk of mental and physical harm to the participant.

Imaging subsample study exclusion criteria for individuals with Down syndrome and controls:

  • Known genetic conditions or syndromes with effects on neurobehavioral development (except for Down syndrome) such as Fragile X syndrome, Williams syndrome, or Prader-Willi syndrome. We may also exclude other syndromes such as Marfan's syndrome or Turner syndrome because of overall significant multisystem effects.
  • Birth weight < 2,000 grams or gestational age < 34 weeks (infants with Down syndrome infants) or <37 weeks (control subjects)
  • Significant perinatal adversity, in utero neurotoxin exposure or maternal gestational diabetes requiring medication management
  • Significant medical conditions (unrelated to Down syndrome) affecting growth, development, cognition or sensory impairments. We will conduct a review of the medical history to identify major medical conditions that might be a reason for exclusion.
    • Neurological event like a stroke
    • Congenital infection associated with altered development (e.g., congenital rubella)
    • Significant infection affecting the brain after birth, like meningitis
  • In infants with Down syndrome, severe medical issues which may exert significant developmental effects beyond Down syndrome such as:
    • Cyanotic cardiac abnormalities (e.g., Tetralogy of Fallot) that affect overall oxygen levels
    • Frailty because of recovery from significant surgery or extended hospital stays
  • Contraindication for MRI
  • English not predominant home language
  • Family history of a first-degree relative with psychosis or bipolar disorder (controls only)
  • To be consistent with prior imaging studies from the infant brain imaging study, healthy controls will additionally be excluded for a family history of a first- or second-degree relative with ASD to also allow them to serve as a comparison group for elevated familial liability for ASD.

Sleep subsample study exclusion criteria:

  • Participants under the age of 12 who are currently being treated for obstructive sleep apnea using a positive airway pressure (PAP) device.
  • For the WatchPAT device, participants must weigh more than 65 pounds. They cannot have a permanent pacemaker or sustained non-sinus cardiac arrhythmias.

Locations

  • University of California Irvine not yet accepting patients
    Orange California 92868 United States
  • University of Washington not yet accepting patients
    Seattle Washington 98195 United States
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison accepting new patients
    Madison Wisconsin 53705 United States

Details

Status
accepting new patients at some sites,
but this study is not currently recruiting here
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
RTI International
Links
Related Info
ID
NCT07625579
Study Type
Observational
Participants
Expecting 1400 study participants
Last Updated