Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Retinal nonperfusion drives vision-threatening complications such as pathological neovascularization, which can lead to neovascular glaucoma, vitreous hemorrhage, or tractional retinal detachments and macular edema in diabetic retinopathy. Thus, decreasing nonperfusion area with aid of anti-VEGF agents might be a useful way to prevent deteriorating course of diabetic retinopathy. The main purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of intravitreal aflibercept injection in improvement of retinal nonperfusion and identify associated factors in patients with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy with moderate retinal nonperfusion.


Clinical Trial Description

Retinal nonperfusion drives vision-threatening complications such as pathological neovascularization, which can lead to neovascular glaucoma, vitreous hemorrhage, or tractional retinal detachments and macular edema in various retinal vascular diseases including diabetic retinopathy and retinal vein occlusion. Silva et al revealed that retinal nonperfusion area was correlated highly with diabetic retinopathy severity in their recent paper. It should be clarified that retinal nonperfusion is not synonymous with retinal ischemia, which implies tissue hypoxia, but is a useful surrogate.

Retinal nonperfusion has known to be associated with the production of vascular endothelial factor (VEGF). Recently, Campochiaro et al reported that neutralization of VEGF using ranibizumab improved macular edema and reversed the worsening of retinal nonperfusion in patients with retinal vein occlusion and diabetic macular edema. The precise mechanism for improved perfusion in the VEGF treated eye is uncertain. The authors suggested that VEGF exacerbates retinal ischemia by increasing leukostasis, and intravitreal anti-VEGF agents may break the feedback loop, allowing reperfusion to occur. There might be a portion of circulation that is closed but not permanently, and this reversible closure is modulated by VEGF.

The study by Campochiaro et al, however, was limited in that they reviewed retinal nonperfusion within a template consisting of the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy subfields mainly confined to posterior pole of the fundus. Wide-field retinal imaging is an imaging technique that allows a view of almost 200° of the fundus in a single image. It has been well shown that wide-field scans allow the detection of peripheral pathology that may be missed on 75 degrees of achieved by montaging the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study 7-standard fields.

To investigators knowledge, there has been no previous study evaluating the longitudinal change of retinal nonperfusion after aflibercept treatment in a larger area of the retina by taking advantage of the 200° field of view in diabetic retinopathy. The main purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of intravitreal aflibercept injection in improvement of retinal nonperfusion and identify associated factors in patients with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy with moderate retinal nonperfusion. ;


Study Design

Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03006081
Study type Interventional
Source Asan Medical Center
Contact Yoon Jeon Kim, MD
Phone 82-2-3010-3680
Email anne215@gmail.com
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2
Start date May 2016
Completion date June 2018

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03660371 - ILM Peeling in PDR Patients Undergoing PPV for VH N/A
Completed NCT03660384 - Silicone Oil Versus Gas in PDR Patients Undergoing Vitrectomy N/A
Completed NCT03660345 - PPV With Internal Limiting Membrane Peeling for Treatment-Naïve DME Phase 3
Completed NCT04905459 - ARDA Software for the Detection of mtmDR
Active, not recruiting NCT04271709 - Manhattan Vision Screening and Follow-Up Study (NYC-SIGHT) N/A
Recruiting NCT03713268 - Intraoperative OCT Guidance of Intraocular Surgery II
Completed NCT05022615 - Comparing 3 Imaging Systems
Completed NCT00385333 - Metabolic Mapping to Measure Retinal Metabolism Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04101604 - Biomarkers of Common Eye Diseases
Completed NCT03702374 - Combined Antioxidant Therapy on Oxidative Stress, Mitochondrial Dysfunction Markers in Diabetic Retinopathy Phase 3
Completed NCT01908816 - An Open-label Extended Clinical Protocol of Ranibizumab to Evaluate Safety and Efficacy in Rare VEGF Driven Ocular Diseases. Phase 3
Completed NCT04009980 - Long-term Retinal Changes After Topical Citicoline Administration in Patients With Mild Signs of Diabetic Retinopathy in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. N/A
Completed NCT02924311 - Routine Clinical Practice for Use of Intravitreal Aflibercept Treatment in Patients With Diabetic Macular Edema
Not yet recruiting NCT06257082 - Video-based Patient Education Intervention for Diabetic Eye Screening in Latinx Communities N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05452993 - Screening for Diabetic Retinopathy in Pharmacies With Artificial Intelligence Enhanced Retinophotography N/A
Withdrawn NCT02812030 - Aflibercept for Retinopathy in the Real World N/A
Completed NCT02391558 - Clinical Evaluation of Noninvasive OCT Angiography Using a Zeiss OCT Prototype to Compare to Fluorescein Angiography N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02330042 - OCT Biomarkers for Diabetic Retinopathy
Active, not recruiting NCT02353923 - OcuStem Nutritional Supplement in Diabetic Patients With Mild to Moderate Non-proliferative Retinopathy N/A
Completed NCT02390245 - Philadelphia Telemedicine Glaucoma Detection and Follow-Up Study N/A