Glaucoma Clinical Trial
— LOVITOfficial title:
Clinical Effectiveness of Low Vision Rehabilitation in Glaucoma Patients With Moderate or Severe Vision Loss
Verified date | September 2016 |
Source | Lawson Health Research Institute |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Canada: Ethics Review Committee |
Study type | Interventional |
Our team is interested in what can be done to improve the functioning of patients who suffer
from glaucoma, a chronic and irreversible eye disease. Patients with vision loss as a result
of this disease may feel like they have been 'given up on', or lost to our medical system
when no further interventions can be offered to treat their eye disease. It is our intent to
investigate what alternatives we can provide our patients, instead of simply saying,
'nothing more can be done'. We have learned from studies done on other chronic eye diseases,
like age related macular degeneration, that low vision rehabilitation can improve visual
function.
What exactly is low vision? It can involve a loss of visual acuity, making activities such
as reading or writing a challenge; it can involve loss of contrast sensitivity, making
shapes and edges hard to discern, like those of a stair edge, or person's face. It could
also involve a loss of peripheral, or side vision which is a symptom common to most glaucoma
patients. Whatever the cause of low vision, doing day-to-day activities can become
increasingly difficult, and many suffer from a loss of their independence and may even
become depressed. Low vision rehabilitation involves helping patients to use their remaining
vision in optimal, and sometimes even new, ways. This involves an assessment of a person's
baseline vision, and an idea of what their needs are. Patients are then given low vision
aids (such as magnifiers, telescopes, video screens which magnify images, and other tools)
as well as instructions and support for adapting to living and functioning with altered
vision.
Although there currently exists no cure for glaucoma, and we are certainly not promising a
reversal of the damage done to the eyes from this chronic disease, we do believe that these
types of rehabilitation services may offer some hope and potential visual benefit to
patients living with vision loss. Our hypothesis is that the use of state-of-the-art low
vision aids in patients with advanced glaucomatous visual loss will provide an improvement
in visual tasks and thereby an improvement in quality of life.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 16 |
Est. completion date | August 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Primary or secondary open angle glaucoma that has been stable for at least 12 months 2. Presenting best corrected visual acuity (in the better seeing eye), measured at the screening visit, better than 20/400 but worse than 20/100 as a result of primary or secondary glaucoma. 3. No surgical or laser procedures in the last 6 months 4. The minimum number of degrees of central visual field (30-2 or 24-2 SITA threshold) should be no less than 20 degrees Exclusion Criteria: 1. Has no access to telephone 2. Is unable to speak English 3. Has previously received comprehensive low vision services 4. Has English literacy screening less than 5th grade level (Dolch Basic Sight Words List) 5. Has history of stroke with aphasia 6. Has other health condition that would preclude follow-up (e.g., significant malignancy or life-threatening disease) 7. Is unable or unwilling to attend clinic visits required for the study 8. Has severe hearing impairment that interferes with participation in telephone questionnaire 9. Reports significant loss of vision since last eye exam 10. Has macular degeneration, vitreous hemorrhage, serous or hemorrhagic detachment of the macula, clinically significant macular edema or cystoid macular edema that is likely to result in further loss or improvement in vision after treatment in better-seeing eye 11. Planned cataract extraction within the next six months |
Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Ivey Eye Institute | London | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Lawson Health Research Institute | Pfizer |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Visual reading ability and visual mobility. | The primary outcome measure will be visual reading ability and visual mobility. | 2 weeks | No |
Secondary | Other visual ability domains. | Mean changes in other visual ability domains (overall ability, visual information processing and visual motor skills) on the VA LV VFQ-48 from baseline to two weeks are the secondary outcome measures. | 2 weeks | No |
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