Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06117332 |
Other study ID # |
DP2LM014268 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 2, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
August 31, 2027 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
University of California, Santa Barbara |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Visual impairment is one of the ten most prevalent causes of disability and poses
extraordinary challenges to individuals in our society that relies heavily on sight. Living
with acquired blindness not only lowers the quality of life of these individuals, but also
strains society's limited resources for assistance, care and rehabilitation. However, to
date, there is no effective treatment for man patients who are visually handicapped as a
result of degeneration or damage to the inner layers of the retina, the optic nerve or the
visual pathways. Therefore, there are compelling reasons to pursue the development of a
cortical visual prosthesis capable of restoring some useful sight in these profoundly blind
patients.
However, the quality of current prosthetic vision is still rudimentary. A major outstanding
challenge is translating electrode stimulation into a code that the brain can understand.
Interactions between the device electronics and the retinal neurophysiology lead to
distortions that can severely limit the quality of the generated visual experience. Rather
than aiming to one day restore natural vision (which may remain elusive until the neural code
of vision is fully understood), one might be better off thinking about how to create
practical and useful artificial vision now.
The goal of this work is to address fundamental questions that will allow the development of
a Smart Bionic Eye, a device that relies on AI-powered scene understanding to augment the
visual scene (similar to the Microsoft HoloLens), tailored to specific real-world tasks that
are known to diminish the quality of life of people who are blind (e.g., face recognition,
outdoor navigation, reading, self-care).
Description:
The investigators will perform basic experimental studies involving humans (BESH) designed to
quantify the perceptual experiences of retinal and cortical prosthesis patients. These
experiments will follow standard procedures for collecting behavioral data, and involve
simple perceptual tasks (e.g., signal detection, object recognition) and behavioral tasks
(e.g., walking towards a goal location).
The investigators will produce visual percepts in CORTIVIS and Argus II patients either by
directly stimulating electrodes (using FDA-approved pulse trains), or by asking them to view
a computer or projector screen and using standard stimulation protocols (as is standardly
used for their devices) to convert the computer or projector screen image into pulse trains
on their electrodes. Informed by psychophysical data and computational models, the
investigators will test the ability of different stimulus encoding methods to support simple
perceptual and behavioral tasks (e.g., object recognition, navigation). These encoding
methods may include computer vision and machine learning methods to highlight important
objects in the scene or to highlight nearby obstacles and may be tailored to each individual
patient. Performance of prosthesis patients will be compared both across stimulus encoding
methods and to performance in normally sighted control subjects viewing stimuli manipulated
to match the expected perceptual experience of prosthesis patients.
The normal method of stimulation is a chain from a camera mounted on eye glasses through a
video processing unit (VPU) which converts the video image into FDA-approved electronic pulse
trains. Sometimes the investigators will test subjects using the camera. More often, the
investigators will carry out 'direct stimulation' when using an external computer to directly
specify pulse trains (e.g., for Argus II, a 1s 10 Hz cathodic pulse train, with a current
amplitude of 100 microAmps and a pulse width of 45 microseconds to Electrode 12). These
direct pulse trains are then sent to the VPU. This VPU contains software that makes sure that
these pulse trains are within FDA-approved safety limits. For example, these pulses must be
charge-balanced (equal anodic/cathodic charge) and must have a charge density below 35
microCoulombs/cm2. Sometimes the investigators will test subjects using the camera. Sometimes
the investigators will directly send pulses to the VPU by directly specifying pulse trains
(e.g., send a 1 s 10 Hz cathodic pulse train, with a current amplitude of 100 microAmps and a
pulse width of 45 microAmps to Electrode 12 of an Argus II implant).
Important parameters for safety include a) pulses must be charge-balanced (an anodic pulse
must be followed quickly by a cathodic pulse and vice versa or the electrode will dissolve),
b) charge density should be limited. The frequency of the pulse train and the current
amplitude of the pulse train is not actually a critical safety issue, since the
electronic/neural interface is robust to extremely high rates of stimulation and high current
levels. However, high frequency pulse trains or high amplitude pulse trains can produce
discomfort in patients (analogous to going from a dark movie theatre to sunlight) due to
inducing large-scale neuronal firing. The investigators will normally be focusing on
pulse-train frequencies/amplitudes that are in the normal range used by the patient when
using their device. If the investigators use parameters that might be expected to produce a
more intense neural response (and therefore have the potential to cause discomfort), they
will always introduce them in a step-wise function (e.g. gradually increasing amplitude)
while checking that the sensation is not 'uncomfortably bright', and the investigators will
immediately decrease the intensity of stimulation if patients report that the sensation
approaches discomfort. The PI has experience in this approach and will train all personnel on
these protocols.
In response to the stimulation/image on the monitor, subjects will be asked to either make a
perceptual judgment or perform a simple behavioral task. Examples include detecting a
stimulus ('did you see a light on that trial'), reporting size by drawing on a touch screen,
or walking to a target location. Both patient response and reaction time will be recorded.
None of these stimuli will elicit emotional responses or be aversive in any way.
In some cases, the investigators will also collect data measuring subjects' eye position.
This is a noninvasive procedure that will be carried out using standard eye-tracking
equipment via an infra-red camera that tracks the position of the subjects' pupil. Only
measurements like eye position or eye blinks will be recorded, so these data do not contain
identifiable information.
Subjects are encouraged to take breaks as often as needed (they may leave the testing room).
The investigators use various experimental techniques including: (1) Same-different - e.g.
subjects are shown two percepts and are asked if they are the same or different. (2) Method
of adjustment - e.g. subjects are asked to adjust a display/stimulation intensity until a
percept is barely visible, (3) 2-alternative-forced choice - e.g. subjects will be presented
with two stimuli and asked which of the two stimuli is brighter (4) Identification - subjects
are asked to identify which letter was presented.
In some cases, as well as measuring accuracy, the investigators will also measure improvement
with practice by repeating the same task across multiple sessions (up to 5 sessions, each
carried out on different testing days).