Central Retinal Vein Occlusion With Macular Edema Clinical Trial
Official title:
Long-term Need of Ranibizumab Injections With or Without Early Targeted Peripheral Laser Photocoagulation for Treatment of Macular Edema Due to Central Retinal Vein Occlusion
Intravitreal injections of Ranibizumab will be applied in all patients according to treatment guidelines. The experimental group will receive additional targeted laser photocoagulation of the peripheral areas of capillary non-perfusion (up to 4 laser treatments within 1st year of the study). Based on the long-term observation after CoRaLa I study an importantly shorter duration of treatment and a relevant reduction of the total number of re-injections in RL patients is expected.
Retinal vein occlusion (RVO) is the second most common retinal vascular disease leading to visual impairment. Main cause for visual impairment in CRVO (Central Retinal Vein Occlusion) is macular edema (ME) while neovascularization of the retina and/or the anterior segment is the most serious complication leading to vitreous hemorrhage, retinal detachment and neovascular glaucoma. In serious cases loss of vision is imminent. To date, no causal treatment has been proven to be effective in large trials. Intravitreal injections of drugs that inhibit the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and other inflammatory factors are the current treatments of choice for ME due to CRVO. Two different anti-VEGF drugs (ranibizumab and aflibercept), and a biodegradable dexamethasone implant are approved by the EMA (European Medicines Agency). Based on data from confirmatory studies anti-VEGF-drugs are recommended as a treatment of first choice in patients with RVO. All intravitreal drugs provide only a temporary effect with need for re-treatment for recurrences of ME. Mean number of ranibizumab application needed in CRVO patients was found to be 7.4 to 10.2 injections in 12 months. A significant number of CRVO patients require treatment over several years. Need for repetitive treatments and ophthalmic controls are a major burden for patients (and their relatives who are required for driving the patients to ophthalmologists) despite of only few adverse events and generally well-tolerated injections. Endophthalmitis is the most severe ocular complication which can be eye-sight-threatening. The more injections are administered, the higher is the cumulative risk of complications. Due to high costs (>1000 € per injection) treatment with repeated injections over years is of significant socio-economic importance, too. Therefore, treatments concepts which would lead to permanent reduction of ME and/or significantly reduce the number of re-injections over long-term periods are the major currently unmet need in patients with RVO. Until now, several studies evaluated the impact of the additional pan-retinal laser photocoagulation in patients undergoing the anti-VEGF-treatment for the ME due to retinal vein occlusions. However, most of the studies are limited by retrospective design, small number of evaluated patients or lack of the randomization. None of the available prospective randomized studies had sufficient power to finally clarify the benefit of the additional laser treatment. Therefore, there is an unmet need for a large randomized, prospective, multicentric trials. The proposed study will be the first sufficiently powered trial evaluating the long-term effect of targeted laser photocoagulation performed selectively (targeted) in peripheral areas of non-perfusion in combination with standard anti-VEGF treatment (ranibizumab injections) on the duration of the required intravitreal treatment over time period of 2 years. ;
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