
Clinical Trials
Resource Hub
Clinical trials are medical research studies that test a new treatment, device, or procedure to see if it is safe and effective.
Researchers test a new intervention or treatment, device, or procedure to see if it is safe and effective.
- Participants are assigned to receive the investigational treatment or a comparison (such as the current standard of care or a placebo).
- Trials go through phases (I–III) to answer questions about safety, effectiveness, and how the treatment compares to current options.
- Why they matter: They provide the evidence the FDA and other regulators need to decide if a new therapy can be approved. Complete our interest form to be notified of changes in trial status.
KCNT1-Targeted Clinical Studies
| Trial name & link | Sponsor | Modality | Phase | Overall Status* | Countries / Active sites | Coordinator / Contact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ABS-1230] | Actio Biosciences | Small molecule | I (safety in healthy humans) -nearing completion | Not recruiting. (Screening to begin soon) | US | See webpage for more info |
| [KANDLE Study] | Servier | ASO | Ib/II | Recruiting (site-dependent) | Spain, France ( Italy, US, Japan opening soon) | scientificinformation@servier.com |
| [ATL-201] | Atalanta | di-siRNA | TBD | Preclinical | NA | NA |
| [KCNT1 International Registry] | Multicenter | Observational | – | Not yet recruiting | US /international | Amanda.A@kcnt1epilepsy.org |
*Overall status reflects registry labels (e.g., Not yet recruiting, Recruiting, Active—not recruiting). Individual hospitals enroll only after site activation (contracts, ethics, training, drug on site).
Clinical trial information is shared for awareness only. The KCNT1 Epilepsy Foundation does not screen participants or manage enrollment. Eligibility and participation decisions are made by the study sponsor and research sites.
Frequently Asked Questions About Clinical Trials
Participation Basics
Can I participate in more than one study at the same time?
- You can often participate in multiple observational studies, because they don’t involve experimental therapies.
- For clinical trials, you must ask the trial’s Primary Investigator. Some studies prohibit participation in another trial at the same time.
Who is eligible to participate in a clinical trial?
If I am eligible for a trial, how do I enroll?
What if I don’t qualify for a clinical trial?
What to Expect During a Study
What is informed consent?
Will my medical care change if I join a study?
What happens during a clinical trial?
How long do clinical trials last?
Safety & Ethics
How do I know if a study is safe?
What are my rights and responsibilities as a participant?
Can I share my experience publicly?
Finding Trials
Where can I find out about clinical trials?
Can I join a clinical trial if I live outside the United States?
Do studies cost money to join?
Want to Learn More? Visit our clinical trials education page!
Disclaimer: We gratefully acknowledge many organizations for educational resources we have provided here: SCN2aFamilies, Global Genes, Dravet Syndrome Foundation, International Rett Syndrome Foundation, Angelman Clinical Trials, LGS Foundation, NIH, HHS, FDA, and others.
KCNT1 Clinical Trial Interest Form
This brief form helps the KCNT1 Epilepsy Foundation understand who is interested in learning about KCNT1 clinical trials and what kind of educational resources might be helpful.
Your answers do not enroll you in a clinical trial, and the Foundation does not provide medical advice or decide who is eligible. With your permission, we may share your contact information with an approved trial site coordinator so they can contact you if there is a potential match.