← Back to news
NewsCLINICALTRIALS.GOVFriday, February 20, 2026 · February 20, 2026

New recruiting trial: FACE.S-4-KIDS : A Deep Phenotyping Database of Craniofacial Anomalies During Development With 4 Pilot Projects

WHY IT MATTERS

New clinical trials expand access to investigational treatments for rare disease patients.

FACE.S-4-KIDS is an ambitious database project addressing the scientific question of the variable expression of craniofacial disorders in humans, to reach a sound clinical management (diagnosis, prognosis), and the establishment of personalised treatment plans.

View Trial
Read the original at ClinicalTrials.gov
Clinical TrialRecruitingCraniofacial Abnormalities

Related conditions

KAT6-related intellectual disability-craniofacial anomalies-cardiac defects syndromeOBSOLETE: Short stature-heart defect-craniofacial anomalies syndromeMitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome, encephalomyopathic form with variable craniofacial anomalies

Related news

ClinicalTrials.gov · April 14, 2026
New recruiting trial: Evaluation of Socio-professional Inclusion for Young Adults Aged 15-25 Living With a Rare Genetic Disability
Rare diseases are often synonymous with difficulties for sufferers, whether physical, mental or social. Patients sufferi
ClinicalTrials.gov · April 13, 2026
New recruiting trial: Study of High-Precision Evaluation of Molecular ResiduaL Disease Through a PlatfOrm for Cancer TracKing and Interception (SHERLOCK)
This study will collect, annotate, and sequence biospecimens (blood, tissue, urine, saliva and surgery drainage) from pa
ClinicalTrials.gov · February 5, 2026
New recruiting trial: Genetic Aortic Diseases and Cardiovascular Complications. An Observational Survey of Risk Factors.
The aim of this observational study is to define the behavioural and cardiovascular risk factor profiles of patients wit
ClinicalTrials.gov · January 29, 2026
New recruiting trial: Observational Study of Responses to Treatments in Advanced Central Nervous System (CNS) Tumors
Background: Primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors grow in the brain and spinal cord. These tumors are rare, but t