View clinical trials related to Macular Degeneration.
Filter by:To investigate the effects of lutein supplementation on macular pigment density using FLIO and MPOD measurements in patients with age-related macular degeneration and healthy subjects over a course of 6 months.
Retinal diseases are currently the leading cause of legal blindness in the developed world. Among these disorders, age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is one of the most prevalent conditions in individuals over 55 years of age. Late AMD, the most severe presentation of the disease, clinically manifests as either geographic atrophy (dry form) or choroidal neovascularization (CNV) (wet form). Although patients with wet AMD only represent 10% of the total cases, CNV is the main and most serious cause of central vision loss. At present, the treatment of wet AMD comprises intraocular injections of certain antiangiogenic agents which act by blocking VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor). No effective treatment is yet available for dry AMD, though the AREDS (Age-Related Eye Disease Study) has shown that the administration of antioxidant supplements is able to slow progression of the disease. Such vitamin supplements are also indicated in patients who already have severe AMD (both exudative and atrophic) in one eye, since the risk of progression in these cases is high. Recent studies involving new antioxidant and antiangiogenic molecules such as resveratrol, present in grapes and wine, have also revealed great efficacy in slowing the progression of advanced AMD. Hydroxytyrosol is another polyphenol with important antioxidant and antiinflammatory effects in the RPE. Considering the above, the present randomized, multicenter interventional study involving Spanish and Portuguese patients with unilateral wet AMD was designed to compare the effects of two different nutritional supplements: one containing the antioxidants and minerals recommended by the AREDS at doses that can be used in the European Union (Theavit), and the other comprising these same substances plus omega-3 fatty acids (lipidic antioxidant), lutein (pigment protecting against light-induced damage) and resveratrol (antioxidant and antiangiogenic agent) (Retilut).
Phase 1 open-label study to assess the bioactivity, ocular and systemic safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of a single dose injections of EYP-1901 at three dose levels: 440 µg, 2060 µg and 3090 µg in subjects with Wet Age Related Macular Degeneration (wAMD)
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of intravitreal injection of ONL1204 Ophthalmic Solution in patients with geographic atrophy associated with AMD. GA associated with AMD is one of the world's leading causes of visual disability. It is a progressive disease with no approved therapy to slow or arrest the process of continual photoreceptor and retinal epithelial (RPE) cell loss. A safe and effective therapy for GA will have vast societal benefits. ONL1204 is being developed for this purpose. ONL1204 is a first-in-class inhibitor of fragment apoptosis stimulator receptor-mediated cell death in development for to reduce rates of vision in patients with GA associated with AMD. ONL1204 has demonstrated protection of multiple retinal cell types in several preclinical models of acute ocular injury and the protection of RPE in AMD models. ONL1204 Ophthalmic Solution is currently in a Phase 1 clinical study in patients with macula-off retinal detachment to evaluate safety and tolerability of a single-dose of ONL1204 Ophthalmic Solution. The study is ongoing and uses the same doses and route of administration as this Phase 1b study in patients with GA.
Vision at twilight and night is more difficult and dangerous for the entire population, even more so for the elderly and especially for the elderly with degenerative disease. Multiple worldwide laboratories have demonstrated the ability to raise macular pigment optical density with dietary carotenoids. This proposal further evaluates the relationship between macular re- pigmentation and vision under stressed conditions simulating twilight and night driving.
Blindness can be caused by many ocular diseases, such as diabetic retinopathy, retinal vein occlusion, age-related macular degeneration, pathologic myopia and glaucoma. Without timely diagnosis and adequate medical intervention, the visual impairment can become a great burden on individuals as well as the society. It is estimated that China has 110 million patients under the attack of diabetes, 180 million patients with hypertension, 120 million patients suffering from high myopia and 200 million people over 60 years old, which suggest a huge population at the risk of blindness. Despite of this crisis in public health, our society has no more than 3,000 ophthalmologists majoring in fundus oculi disease currently. As most of them assembling in metropolitan cities, health system in this field is frail in primary hospitals. Owing to this unreasonable distribution of medical resources, providing medical service to hundreds of millions of potential patients threatened with blindness is almost impossible. To solve this problem, this software (MCS) was developed as a computer-aided diagnosis to help junior ophthalmologists to detect 13 major retina diseases from color fundus photographs. This study has been designed to validate the safety and efficiency of this device.
The purpose of this study is to assess the vision improvement achieved by patients with retinal disorders who received corneal treatments by a low vision aid device.
To investigate, using optical coherence tomography angiography, the retinal vascular features in patients affected by RAP.
" Wet Age-related Macular Degeneration (wet AMD)" is characterized by the appearance of new choroidal vessels. Several clinical studies have shown the effectiveness of intra-vitreous injections of anti-VEGF (bevacizumab, ranibizumab and aflibercept) against these choroidal neovessels. However, some eyes appear to respond less well or be resistant to anti-VEGF injections, which affects visual acuity. To improve the clinical management of patients with wet AMD, it is important to be able to determine which factors determine the response to anti-VEGF treatment. Non-modifiable factors such as visual acuity or the patient's age at the time of the first injections, the type and size of choroidal neovascularization, as well as certain genetic polymorphisms are known. Two studies, one carried out in Korean patients, the other in different centers in Singapore, New Zealand, Australia and Switzerland showed that active smoking was associated with a poorer response to intra-vitreous injections of ranibizumab, since smoking is also an already well-known modifiable risk factor for the onset of AMD. Another study in the Netherlands shows a poorer visual prognosis after five years of injection treatment in patients who smoke. This study aims to study the effect of active smoking on the visual prognosis of patients with exudative AMD and treated with anti-VEGF injections in a Belgian cohort.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of two different brolucizumab 6 mg dosing regimens in patients with visual impairment due to age-related macular degeneration (AMD) who have previously received anti-VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) treatment.