About Cutis Laxa
Cutis laxa encompasses a heterogeneous group of disorders characterised by loose, inelastic, redundant skin caused by deficient or fragmented elastic fibres in dermal and visceral connective tissue. Genetic forms range from isolated skin involvement to severe systemic disease affecting the lungs (emphysema), cardiovascular system, and skeleton, while acquired forms typically follow an inflammatory trigger. The specific gene affected determines the inheritance pattern, organ involvement, and prognosis.
Common Clinical Features
Clinical Trial Eligibility Tips
What to know before applying to Cutis Laxa trials.
Genetic subtype must be confirmed prior to enrolment, as trials are frequently gene-specific (e.g. ELN haploinsufficiency vs. ATP7A-related vs. LTBP4-related forms).
Pulmonary function testing (spirometry, DLCO) and chest CT are standard baseline assessments for trials targeting systemic cutis laxa with emphysema.
For paediatric enrolment, developmental milestone records and neuroimaging may be required, particularly for ATP6AP2 and other syndromic subtypes.
Patient Resources
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