ICD Q89.8ORPHA:2322KS

Kabuki Syndrome

Kabuki syndrome is a rare genetic condition caused by mutations in KMT2D or KDM6A genes, causing intellectual disability, growth deficiency, distinctive facial features, and skeletal abnormalities. Diagnosis rates have increased with widespread genetic testing. There is no cure, but multidisciplinary support improves quality of life.

333
Articles
6
Trials (1 AU)
Updated
26 March 2026
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Common Questions

What is Kabuki Syndrome?

Kabuki syndrome is a rare genetic condition caused by mutations in KMT2D or KDM6A genes, causing intellectual disability, growth deficiency, distinctive facial features, and skeletal abnormalities. Diagnosis rates have increased with widespread genetic testing. There is no cure, but multidisciplinary support improves quality of life.

How many clinical trials are available for Kabuki Syndrome?

RareWays currently indexes 6 clinical trials for Kabuki Syndrome, of which 1 is actively recruiting. Trial availability changes as new studies are registered — check the trials tab for current status.

Where does the research data for Kabuki Syndrome come from?

RareWays aggregates research from PubMed, Europe PMC, OpenAlex, and ClinicalTrials.gov. Data is updated regularly by Rocky, RareWays' automated research engine. All articles and trials link directly to their original sources.

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This information is for general awareness only.

For guidance specific to your situation, please speak with your healthcare team.