View clinical trials related to Macular Degeneration.
Filter by:Purpose and rationale: To demonstrate similar efficacy, safety and immunogenicity of SOK583A1 and Eylea EU as per Eylea approved treatment regimen in patients with nAMD. The primary clinical question of interest is: Does SOK583A1 have similar efficacy as Eylea EU in terms of mean change in BCVA score in participants with nAMD who are anti-VEGF naive, without important protocol deviations and adherent to the treatment and completed the treatment to Week 8?
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, active-controlled, parallel group, Phase III Clinical Trial To Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety, Pharmacokinetics and Immunogenicity of CKD-701 and Lucentis® in Patients with Neovascular(wet) Age related Macular Degeneration
This study is designed as an observational, non-interventional, multicenter, open label, single arm study in patients being treated with Lucentis® for any approved indication included in the local product posology.
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the proportion of eyes that do not meet the eligibility criteria of clinical trials on neovascular AMD among the entire sample of eyes diagnosed with treatment-naïve neovascular AMD. The eligibility criteria of the VEGF Trap-Eye: Investigation of Efficacy and Safety in Wet AMD (VIEW) studies, were used for this investigation.
RGX-314 is being developed as a novel one-time gene therapy for the treatment of neovascular (wet) age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) also referred to as Wet AMD. Wet AMD is characterized by loss of vision due to new, leaky blood vessel formation in the retina. The purpose of this phase 2, open label study is to evaluate whether different doses of RGX-314 from two different formulations (clinical versus eventual commercial formulation) perform the same in humans when delivered by subretinal administration
Tools to investigate dietary lutein and zeaxanthin (L/Z) intake and electronic device (ED) use are important to progress research that investigates the role of ED blue light (BL) exposure, and dietary L/Z intake on macular health. This project aims to validate two questionnaires developed by our research group: The L/Z FFQ, and the Electronic Device Use Questionnaire (EDUQ). The L/Z FFQ aims to investigate dietary intake of L/Z over the prior week or month. The EDUQ aims to investigate usual hours and behaviours surrounding ED use over the prior three months. This aims of this project are to: 1. Validate a L/Z FFQ recalling over a weekly and monthly timeframe against multiple 24-hour diet recalls over four weeks. 2. Validate the EDUQ against multiple 24-hour ED use diaries over eight weeks. A cohort of 100 adults will be invited to participate to validate the FFQ and EDUQ. Participants will be offered to choose to participate in one or both the questionnaire validations (L/Z FFQ and EDUQ).
This study aims to investigate in healthy adults 18-65 years of age the association of electronic device blue light exposure and macular pigment optical density (MPOD) considering usual dietary intake of lutein and zeaxanthin (L/Z) as confirmed by serum lutein and zeaxanthin concentrations. It is hypothesised in healthy adults 18-65 years of age: 1. Higher usual daily electronic device blue light exposure will be negatively correlated with MPOD value. 2. Usual dietary intake of L/Z will be positively correlated with MPOD value. 3. L/Z concentration will be positively correlated with MPOD value. 4. Usual dietary intake of L/Z will be positively correlated with plasma L/Z concentrations. 5. Higher usual intake of L/Z will mitigate the effect of higher electronic device exposure on MPOD value.
LT7082-001 is an open-label, single-arm pilot study. Patients with intermediate age-related macular degeneration (AMD) wil take T7082 during 12 months , an association of 4 food supplementations . The study objectives are to describe morphological changes and evolution of drusen in macula after a 12-month of food supplementation and to assess the safety of T7082
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of the R:GEN Laser System in subjects with the early stages of age-related macular degeneration.
The purpose of this phase IV study is to identify innovative early imaging parameters as predictors of the long-term clinical response to brolucizumab in terms of fluid resolution in patients with wet Age-related Macular Degeneration (wAMD) with the purpose to evaluate their potential in supporting the treatment regimen choice (q12w or q8w).