View clinical trials related to Retinitis Pigmentosa.
Filter by:This study will assess the progression of RP as seen on newer modalities including spectral-domain optical coherence (SD-OCT) and macular assessment integrity (MAIA) microperimetry to evaluate disease status. Understanding the natural history of the disease is not only essential to monitoring and comparing patient populations in clinical trials. It is also fundamental in the predevelopment phase in order to optimize the study duration needed to observe a statistically significant outcome. Furthermore, since the progression of RP is usually slow, relying on traditional tests can take an unfeasible length of time to observe any meaningful changes and assess therapeutic efficacy for new drugs. Therefore, the results of this study will be beneficial in establishing reliable endpoints and outcome measures for future clinical trials. Such outcome measures may be able to detect treatment response with more precision. More importantly, investigators may be able to detect changes early enough to prevent irreversible vision loss.
the incidence of the disease of retinal degenerations with loss of photoreceptors (related to old age or genetic) on patients' daily lives, is poorly characterize without standardized means of measurement (usually performed with functional vision or reading tasks). self-assessment by a quality of life questionnaire correlated with an assessment of emotional state and direct observation of patients during daily life tasks are the two ways used in a scientific framework to collect data on the difficulties encountered by patients in their daily life. The aim of this project is to determine the behavioral effects of retinitis pigmentosa (RP) by the effects of performance reductions related to adapting to darkness and visual field restriction. Those assessments will be in real conditions but also in virtual reality (VR). This tool can be used to measure a therapeutic benefit for new treatments (like gene therapy, retinal implants, intra vitreous injections …) for visual loss patients.
Retinitis Pigmentosa is characterized by a progressive disappearance of photoreceptors, responsible for a progressive and severe loss of vision. People Retinitis Pigmentosa therefore encounter a large number of difficulties in daily life, specifically for: - Visual research - Visuo-motor coordination in tasks requiring fine motor control - Visuo-motor coordination in mobility tasks This study aims to assess the difficulties in the daily life of subjects with Retinitis Pigmentosa at a very advanced stage unsing, quaify of life questionnaires, simplified locomotion tasks in real situation and a posture task. They are proposing a new test adapted and carried out in real situations, in binocular and monocular vision, making it possible to finely assess locomotion especially for "very low vision" patients. This test will also ultimately make it possible to better evaluate the effectivements, that is to say to observe and quantify objectively by a score the performance progression obtained for locomotion tasks related to the visual recovery generated by the treatment.
To communicate with the observer and guide his gaze on the canvas, painters have developed different stylistic processes that artists, in the manner of scientists, have acquired on the functioning of human visual perception. This direct communication between the artist and the observer is strongly impacted for people with visual impairments. In order to improve the accessibility and autonomy of visually impaired people in museums and to allow each observer to feel the visual and emotional experience closest to the original work of the artist, it is essential to identify the modifications. perceptive generated by the constriction of vision
This study is driven by the hypothesis that navigation for users of retinal prosthetics can be greatly improved by incorporating Spatial Localization and Mapping (SLAM) and object recognition technology conveying environmental information via a retinal prosthesis and auditory feedback. The investigators will study how effectively the SLAM technology enables the visual prosthesis system to construct a map of the user's environment and locate the user within that map. The technology will be tested both with normally sighted individuals donning a virtual reality headset and with retinal prosthesis users (Argus II).
The investigator is examining the safety of transplanting cells into the subretinal space of patients with Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP). The cells are called neural progenitor cells, which are a type of stem cell that can become several different types of cells in the nervous system. These cells have been derived to specifically become astrocytes, which is a type of neuronal cell. The cells are called "CNS10-NPC." The investigational treatment has been tested in animals, but it has not yet been tested in people. In this study, the investigators want to learn if CNS10-NPC cells are safe to transplant into the subretinal space of people.
Purpose: To validate a newly developed battery of performance-based tests of visual function to be presented using virtual reality. The tests are intended as potential outcome measures for clinical trials of treatments of eye disease: they measure visual performance in patients with low vision on visual tasks that a relevant for daily life.
Non-randomized, open label, Phase 1/2 dose escalation study of BS01, a non-replicating, rep/cap-deleted, recombinant adeno-associated virus vector expressing an enhanced light-sensitive channelrhodopsin gene (ChronosFP).
Knowledge of the pathogenesis of ocular conditions, a leading cause of blindness, has benefited greatly from recent advances in ophthalmic imaging. However, current clinical imaging systems are limited in resolution, speed, or access to certain structures of the eye. The use of a high-resolution imaging system improves the resolution of ophthalmoscopes by several orders of magnitude, allowing the visualization of many microstructures of the eye: photoreceptors, vessels, nerve bundles in the retina, cells and nerves in the cornea. The use of a high-speed acquisition imaging system makes it possible to detect functional measurements such as the speed of blood flow. The combination of data from multiple imaging systems to obtain multimodal information is of great importance for improving the understanding of structural changes in the eye during a disease. The purpose of this project is to observe structures that are not detectable with routinely used systems.
To increase the clinical experience of using the rtx1 camera in various retinal disorders and to follow the evolution of structural alterations during retinal diseases using adaptive optics imaging with the rtx1 camera