Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The cornea is the clear layer in front of the iris and pupil. It protects the iris and lens and helps focus light on the retina. Corneal diseases are serious conditions that can cause clouding, distortion, scarring and eventually blindness. There are several types of corneal disease with keratoconus being one of the most prominent. Keratoconus is a weakening and thinning of the central cornea. This thinking causes the cornea to develop a cone-shaped deformity leading to vison loss. Keratoconus is usually bilateral affecting people between 10 and 25. This project aims to collect data on patient suffering with corneal diseases and the treatments they receive, including corneal transplantation, over a period of time during routine clinical practice. A clinical registry such as this can be a very useful tool to provide a real-world view of clinical practice, patient outcomes, safety, and comparative effectiveness. •Methods: Data will be collected from the medical records of patients who have suffered from corneal disease and have undergone treatment in the Ophthalmology department of the CHU Montpellier. A standardized set of data will be collected for all patients. This will include, demographic and social date such as lifestyle and occupation, current and past pathologies and treatment received. This is data that is already collected as part of routine clinical practice. This will be an ongoing registry with the aim of collecting the maximum data possible. The more patients that are entered and the longer the follow up for each patient, the more valuable the data will become. •Discussion: The aim of this registry to help create a better understanding of variations in treatment and outcomes; to examine factors that influence prognosis; to describe treatment patterns, including appropriateness and effectiveness of treatment and disparities in the delivery of care; to monitor safety and harm and to measure quality of care. In the long term the data collected in the registry may serve as a basis for the development of evidence-based clinical management guidelines to help clinicians deliver the most appropriate treatment for corneal diseases in the safest and most efficient manner.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04164407
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital, Montpellier
Contact Vincent Daien, MD, PhD, HDR
Phone 67336966
Email v-daien@chu-montpellier.fr
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date December 1, 2019
Completion date December 30, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04570020 - Scleral Lens Fitting Using Wide-Field OCT
Recruiting NCT02921009 - McNeel Eye Center Corneal Crosslinking Study N/A
Completed NCT01691651 - Botulinum Toxin A for the Treatment of Keratoconus N/A
Terminated NCT02762253 - Study of the Safety and Effectiveness of Photochemically Induced Collagen Cross-Linking in Eyes With Keratoconus. Phase 2
Completed NCT01527708 - Accuracy of Curvature and Wavefront Aberrations of Posterior Corneal Surface, in Keratoconic and Post-CXL Corneas N/A
Completed NCT01527721 - Blurring Strength & Aberrometric Changes Following Corneal Cross-linking (CxL) and CxL Combined With Photorefractive Keratectomy (PRK) in Keratoconus N/A
Recruiting NCT00841386 - Treatment of Keratoconus Using Collagen Cross-Linking Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00347074 - A Clinical Study of Keratoconus in Asian Patients and Assessment of Different Topographic Patterns of Keratoconus in Asian Patients N/A
Completed NCT03187912 - Accelerated Corneal Cross-linking With Different Riboflavin Solutions Phase 3
Completed NCT00584285 - Corneal Topographer Fluorescein Patterns
Completed NCT03511495 - Reliability of Topography Measurements in Keratoconus
Not yet recruiting NCT05395650 - Cyanocobalamin as Photosensitizing Agent
Completed NCT04418999 - Safety and Efficacy of Intracanalicular Dexamethasone Compared to Loteprednol Etabonate in Patients With Keratoconus Early Phase 1
Completed NCT05019768 - Topo-pachimetric Accelerated Epi-On Cross-linking Compared to Dresden Protocol Using Riboflavin With Vitamin E TPGS N/A
Completed NCT03235856 - Retrospective Digital Computer Analysis of Keratoconus Evolution - REDCAKE
Withdrawn NCT01789333 - Higher Irradiance in Keratoconus Ectasia N/A
Completed NCT05114928 - Correlation Between Q-value Changes and Progression of Pediatric Keratoconus.
Completed NCT03647046 - Custom Anterior Surfacing of Scleral Lens for Vision Quality Improvement in Patients With Keratoconus N/A
Recruiting NCT04439552 - fMRI and IVCM Cornea Microscopy of CXL in Keratoconus
Recruiting NCT06100939 - Epithelium-On Corneal Cross-linking in Subjects 8 to 45 Years of Age With Keratoconus Phase 3