Treatment Trials

15 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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RECRUITING
Study to Evaluate Safety of RTx-015 Injection in Retinitis Pigmentosa or Choroideremia Patients (ENVISION)
Description

A Phase 1, open-label, non-randomized, dose-escalation study, where approximately 15 eligible patients with retinitis pigmentosa or choroideremia will be enrolled sequentially in up to 3 dose cohorts of RTx-015. Enrolled patients will receive a single, unilateral intravitreal injection of RTx-015 in the study eye at Visit 3 (Day 0) and be followed for a total of 12 months.

WITHDRAWN
The Dark-Adapted Retinal Function Response in Choroideremia (DARC) Study
Description

Choroideremia (CHM) is an inherited retinal disorder that causes progressive vision loss, ultimately leading to complete blindness. The first symptom is generally night blindness, although, to date, little is known about the extent, type, pattern, and progression of dark-adapted visual function measures in CHM patients. We hypothesize that one of the key events causing night blindness in CHM is deficiency in the chromophore of the rod visual pigment, rhodopsin. We propose that this deficiency is at least in part due to inadequate delivery of vitamin A (all-trans-retinol) to the photoreceptors (PRs) from the ailing retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), characteristic of CHM. We hypothesize that increased availability of vitamin A would potentiate its entry into the RPE-mediated visual cycle, ultimately enabling delivery to the PRs. This would in turn allow rods to perform better by partially overcoming the RPE damage and the impaired chromophore recycling that we postulate exists in CHM. The goals of this proposal are: (1) to test the hypothesis that oral vitamin A supplementation can improve night time and peripheral vision in CHM patients, and (2) to provide detailed characterization of dark-adapted visual function outcome measures to guide interventional CHM trials.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Natural Disease Progression in Participants With Choroideremia
Description

The primary objective of this study is to quantify disease progression measured by best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) in the real-world setting among Choroideremia (CHM) participants. The secondary objectives are to describe demographic and baseline clinical characteristics among CHM participants and to match CHM participants in the Intelligent Research in Sight (IRIS®) Registry to Biogen's investigator sponsored trial (IST) study population using propensity score matching.

Conditions
COMPLETED
A Study to Assess Choroideremia (CHM) Health Outcomes
Description

The primary objectives of this study are to describe disease progression and severity by age in participants with CHM, to assess health-related quality-of-life, resource utilization and work productivity, and to assess quality-of-life, work productivity, and impact on daily activities in caregivers of participants with CHM at different stages of disease progression.

Conditions
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Dose Escalation Study of Intravitreal 4D-110 in Patients With Choroideremia
Description

This study will evaluate safety, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of a single intravitreal (IVT) injection of a recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy, 4D-110, in male patients with genetically-confirmed Choroideremia (CHM).

Conditions
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Long-term Safety and Efficacy Follow-up of BIIB111 for the Treatment of Choroideremia and BIIB112 for the Treatment of X-Linked Retinitis Pigmentosa
Description

The objective of the study is to evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of a sub-retinal injection of BIIB111 in participants with Choroideremia (CHM) who have been previously treated with BIIB111 and who have exited an antecedent study; these treated participants will be compared with untreated control participants who have exited the STAR (NCT03496012) study and BIIB112 in participants with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP) who have been previously treated with BIIB112 and who have exited an antecedent study.

COMPLETED
A Safety Study of Retinal Gene Therapy for Choroideremia With Administration of BIIB111
Description

The objective of the study is to evaluate the safety of bilateral, sequential sub-retinal administration of a single dose of BIIB111 in adult male participants with Choroideremia (CHM).

Conditions
COMPLETED
Efficacy and Safety of BIIB111 for the Treatment of Choroideremia
Description

The objective of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a single sub-retinal injection of BIIB111 in participants with choroideremia (CHM).

Conditions
COMPLETED
Natural History of the Progression of Choroideremia Study
Description

The objective of this natural history study is to gain a better understanding of the progression of choroideremia (CHM) and add to the knowledge base for this rare disease.

Conditions
TERMINATED
"Natural History" Study of Choroideremia
Description

The purpose of this study is to understand the rate of progression of all stages of choroideremia using a variety of assessments performed in the clinic including visual field measures, specialized photography of the eye and participant-reported visual problems

Conditions
COMPLETED
Choroideremia Gene Therapy Clinical Trial
Description

Phase II gene therapy study, involving a total of 6 male patients with choroideremia. The study will be conducted at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, University of Miami. Patients will be required to attend a total of 11 study visits over a 24 month period with an additional 3 year follow-up.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Safety and Dose-escalation Study of AAV2-hCHM in Participants With CHM (Choroideremia) Gene Mutations
Description

This clinical study evaluates the safety and tolerability of AAV2-hCHM in participants with Choroideremia gene mutations.

RECRUITING
Observational Study to Assess Endpoint Operational Feasibility & Measurement Properties in Patients with Retinal Degeneration
Description

The Vision Research and Assessment Institute (VRAI) was established with the purpose of serving as a testing facility for efficacy endpoints for patients with Low Vision. The mission of the VRAI is to enable the highest quality, standardized efficacy testing of patients with visual impairment. The VRAI facilitates the development and refinement of existing endpoints specifically for testing patients with Low Vision.

RECRUITING
Inherited Retinal Degenerative Disease Registry
Description

The My Retina Tracker® Registry is sponsored by the Foundation Fighting Blindness and is for people affected by one of the rare inherited retinal degenerative diseases studied by the Foundation. It is a patient-initiated registry accessible via a secure on-line portal at www.MyRetinaTracker.org. Affected individuals who register are guided to create a profile that captures their perspective on their retinal disease and its progress; family history; genetic testing results; preventive measures; general health and interest in participation in research studies. The participants may also choose to ask their clinician to add clinical measurements and results at each clinical visit. Participants are urged to update the information regularly to create longitudinal records of their disease, from their own perspective, and their clinical progress. The overall goals of the Registry are: to better understand the diversity within the inherited retinal degenerative diseases; to understand the prevalence of the different diseases and gene variants; to assist in the establishment of genotype-phenotype relationships; to help understand the natural history of the diseases; to help accelerate research and development of clinical trials for treatments; and to provide a tool to investigators that can assist with recruitment for research studies and clinical trials.

RECRUITING
High Resolution Retinal Imaging
Description

Studying the morphology and function of the normal and diseased retina in vivo is needed for advancing the detection, diagnosis, and treatment of retinal disease. This protocol uses an adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscope (AOSLO) to image the normal and diseased retina with individual cellular resolution non-invasively. The primary objective of this study is to obtain and analyze high-resolution images of the retina, in particular by imaging the cone photoreceptor mosaic, the retinal vasculature and other retinal layers. The study design will involve case-control studies, where cases are followed over time. Subjects age 7 and older may be invited to participate. The main research procedure involves retinal imaging with the AOSLO. The primary endpoint is the observation of differences in retinal images between subjects with and without retinal diseases. These changes will be quantified by examining the cell density, size, spacing and regularity of the cone photoreceptor mosaic, as well as examining the differences between other retinal layers.