View clinical trials related to Thyroid Eye Disease.
Filter by:The main goal of this study is to learn how teprotumumab will be processed in the body (Pharmacokinetics) subcutaneously and whether it is safe and tolerable after administration into adult patients with thyroid eye disease.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled Phase II/III study in subjects with active thyroid eye disease. Approximately 114 subjects meeting study eligibility criteria will be randomly assigned to IBI311 or placebo on day 1 (D1) in a 2:1 ratio stratified by smoking status
This study was conducted to develop an AI solution to evaluate clinical activity score (CAS) of thyroid associated orbitopathy (TAO) using periocular selfie images taken by smartphones in patients with thyroid dysfunction. An AI solution to evaluate CAS in TAO was developed in previous retrospective study using periorbital digital images taken by DSLR camera in the studio. This AI solution will be adjusted to show its best performance with periocular selfie images taken by smartphones.
To compare the efficacy of local injections of two different types of steroid (betamethasone suspension versus triamcinolone acetate) in management of patients with thyroid-related upper lid retraction either isolated or associated with proptosis.
The overall objective is to investigate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of TEPEZZA® in participants with chronic (inactive) TED (thyroid eye disease). Approximately 57 participants will be enrolled. There will be a treatment period (through Week 24) and a follow up period (where TEPEZZA will not be infused).
The current study involved analysis of the corneal tomographic parameters of patients with thyroid gland dysfunction (hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism), including those with an autoimmune etiology, in comparison to healthy controls without TGD, using pentacam, in an attempt to detect possible early corneal changes and to highlight whether early screening of those patients would be necessary for early detection of KC.
The overall objective is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of teprotumumab in the treatment of thyroid eye disease (TED) in participants who participated in the lead-in study HZNP-TEP-301 (NCT03298867; OPTIC) and who were either proptosis non-responders at Week 24 of HZNP-TEP-301 or were proptosis responders at Week 24 but met the criteria for re-treatment due to relapse during the Follow-Up Period of HZNP-TEP-301.
The overall objective is to investigate the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of teprotumumab (a fully human monoclonal antibody [mAb] inhibitor of the insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor [IGF-1R]) administered once every 3 weeks (q3W) for 21 weeks with a final assessment at Week 24, in comparison to placebo, in the treatment of participants with moderate-to-severe active thyroid eye disease (TED).
There is a general belief among physicians involved with Graves' orbitopathy (GO) that this syndrome is somehow "chronic", namely that the patient's eyes do not return the way they were before GO appeared. The general impression that comes from the available studies is that the eyes of GO patients do not return to normal even after a very long time since the disease appearance under the physician's point of view, although a discrete proportion of patients feel so. However, no studies are available in which the issue was examined with both objective criteria and self-assessment. The present study design was to investigated the disappearance of GO, regardless to treatment, in all consecutive patients with a history of GO of at least 10 years who came for a follow-up visit to our GO clinic over a period of 5 years.
Patients with Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) often have enlarged extraocular muscles and higher orbital fat contents due to their disease process. The confined space of the orbit cannot hold the enlarged orbital contents creating a forward displacement and/or compression of the globe with a rise in intraocular pressure (IOP). Many of these patients undergo surgical decompression, a procedure that fractures orbital bones, in order to allow more space for the enlarged orbital contents to occupy. To date, there is no data that shows intraocular patterns over a 24-hour period in patients with mechanical compression on the globe as in TED. It is not know if the pattern of IOP is more consistent with normal IOP patterns, glaucomatous patterns, or perhaps completely different then either. The goal of this project is to investigate patterns of IOP in patients requiring orbital decompression because of orbital congestion. Changes in IOP during a 24-hour period will be studied with a contact-lens embedded sensor that provides continuous data. This device has previously been investigated and shown to be safe and well-tolerated. Monitoring the pattern in these patients will allow us to compare Thyroid TED patterns of IOP with those of normal and glaucomatous patients. Also, testing these patients before and after orbital decompression surgery will allow characterization of how intraocular pressure changes once the mechanical compression on the globe is relieved.