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Showing 1-20 of 51 trials
NCT06646289
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of subretinal delivery of Adeno-associated Virus Vector (AAV5 hRKp.RPGR) gene therapy in adults and children with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa.
NCT05926583
The purpose of the study is to assess the safety and tolerability of bilateral subretinal delivery of adeno-associated virus vector with a serotype 5 capsid human rhodopsin kinase promoter. retinitis pigmentosa guanosine triphosphatase regulator (AAV5-hRKp.RPGR).
NCT05537220
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is an inherited retinal degeneration caused by one of several mistakes in the genetic code. Such mistakes are called mutations. The mutations cause degeneration of rod photoreceptors which are responsible for vision in dim illumination resulting in night blindness. After rod photoreceptors are eliminated, gradual degeneration of cone photoreceptors occurs resulting in gradual constriction of side vision that eventually causes tunnel vision. Oxidative stress contributes to cone degeneration. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) reduces oxidative stress and in animal models of RP it slowed cone degeneration. In a phase I clinical trial in patients with RP, NAC taken by month for 6 months caused some small improvements in two different vision tests suggesting that long-term administration of NAC might slow cone degeneration in RP. NAC Attack is a clinical trial being conducted at many institutions in the US, Canada, and Europe designed to determine if taking NAC for several years provides benefit in patients with RP.
NCT05786287
The study will perform to follow-up UC-MSCs and CM transplantation. 18 patients will be called back to be examined after 5 years of UC-MSC and/or CM transplantation.
NCT07174726
The purpose of this Phase 2 Study is to see if the investigational study drug, laruparetigene zovaparvovec, also known as AGTC-501, given in both eyes, is safe and works to preserve and/or improve vision and other symptoms of XLRP.
NCT07292987
This study explores whether adding early nurse-led and psychological support after the diagnosis of retinitis pigmentosa (RP) can improve patient experience and emotional well-being. RP is a rare, progressive eye disease often diagnosed after a long and difficult process, and receiving the diagnosis can be emotionally distressing. Eighty newly diagnosed adults will be randomly assigned to either usual care or an enhanced pathway that includes early follow-up with a nurse, structured emotional monitoring, and a psychologist visit at six months. The study aims to determine if this structured support improves patient satisfaction and reduces anxiety and depression compared with standard care.
NCT03146078
The overall goal of this project funded by the Foundation Fighting Blindness is to characterize the natural history of disease progression in patients with USH2A related retinal degeneration associated with congenital hearing loss (Usher syndrome type 2a) or non-syndromic retinitis pigmentosa (RP39). RUSH2A Extension Study: The purpose of this addendum is to extend RUSH2A to 7- and 9-year visits, with the goal to use longer term data to further develop and support early candidate endpoints as possible clinical trial outcomes.
NCT02556736
All participants in phase 1 and phase 2a had hand motion visual acuity or worse. If efficacy was demonstrated from phase 1, better vision subjects could be enrolled; however, efficacy was not demonstrated.
NCT06789445
Study OpCT-001-101 is a Phase 1/2a first-in-human, multisite, 2-part interventional study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and the effect on clinical outcomes of OpCT-001 in up to approximately 54 adults with primary photoreceptor (PR) disease. Phase 1 will focus on safety and features a dose-escalation design. Phase 2 is designed to gather additional safety data and assess the effect of OpCT-001 on measures of visual function, functional vision, and anatomic measures of engraftment in different clinical subgroups.
NCT07265895
Inherited Retinal Diseases (IRDs) are a heterogeneous group of genetically based degenerative retinal disorders, representing a major cause of visual impairment and blindness in working-age adults. Despite the approval of the first gene therapy for RPE65-related IRD (voretigene neparvovec) in 2017, most IRDs remain untreatable, though many gene therapies are in development. Effective trial design and therapy development require a deep understanding of disease natural history and genotype-phenotype correlations. Over 270 IRD-associated genes are known (e.g., ABCA4, USH2A, RPGR, PRPH2, BEST1), each linked to distinct phenotypes and clinical progression. This retrospective study analyzes clinical, functional, and imaging data (Optical Coherence Tomography, Fundus Autofluorescence, Microperimetry) from a large, genetically characterized IRD cohort at the IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele up to December 31, 2025. The aims are to describe natural history, define genotype-phenotype relationships, and identify structural and functional outcome measures useful for future clinical trial endpoints, supporting personalized prognosis and trial design.
NCT07266584
The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the PRIMA Products in participants with inherited retinal degeneration affecting the macula (including but not limited to Stargardt disease, and Retinitis Pigmentosa). Eligible participants will be implanted with the PRIMA Stim implant. The participants will be assessed with various visual function and functional vision tests at defined timepoints throughout the clinical investigation with the PRIMA Products. The purpose of this study is to gather enough clinical data to support the clinical evaluation required for the continuous development to improve the PRIMA Products.
NCT04639635
Mutations in the rod-expressed gene, cyclic nucleotide-gated channel beta subunit (CNGB1) and associated inborn errors in metabolism are causes of retinal disease that causes progressive loss of vision. Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a major cause of untreatable blindness associated with CNGB1 (CNGB1-RP). RP involves the death of photoreceptor cells that can be caused by mutations in a number of different genes. Treatment by gene therapy could prevent blindness in cases of inherited retinal dystrophies including RP. In the future RP due to mutations in CNGB1 may be treatable by gene therapy since this form of photoreceptor degeneration involves a slow loss of rod photoreceptor cells. This provides a wide window of opportunity for the identification of patients and initiation of treatment. Our efforts are directed toward developing gene therapy as a treatment. To this end, our objective is to better understand the disease process of CNGB1-RP and other allied inherited disorders so that we can develop clinical tests to measure the outcomes of treatment.
NCT06628947
The goal of the study is to investigate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of up to 3 doses of KIO-301 administered by intravitreal (IVT) injection bilaterally every 6 weeks in patients with late-stage retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Late-stage RP patients will include those patients with No Light Perception (NLP), or Low Vision (LV).
NCT07228793
This natural history study of patients with EYS mutations from Russia and former CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) territories will accelerate the development of outcome measures for clinical trials. Sensitive, reliable outcome measures of retinal degeneration will greatly facilitate development of treatments for retinitis pigmentosa due to EYS mutations. This approach helps to develop experimental treatment protocol, and assessing its effectiveness. The goals and expected impact of this natural history study are to: 1. Describe the natural history of retinal degeneration in patients with biallelic mutations in EYS gene in Russia and former CIS territories. 2. Identify sensitive structural and functional outcome measures to use for future multicenter clinical trials in EYS-related retinal degeneration in Russia and former CIS territories. 3. Identify well-defined subpopulations for future clinical trials of investigative treatments for EYS-related retinal degeneration in Russia and former CIS territories.
NCT06891885
The Goal of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and clinical responses following single dose of DSP-3077. Study enrolls both male and female patients in 3 cohorts with each cohort defined by visual acuity (VA) criteria and dose level of DSP-3077. Each cohort will include 4 participants.
NCT04850118
This study will evaluate and compare the safety, efficacy, and tolerability of 2 doses of a recombinant adeno-associated virus vector (AGTC-501/laruparetigene zovaparvovec )) to an untreated control group in male participants with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa caused by RPGR mutations.
NCT07056738
The aim of this study is an explorative prospective observation of retinal ganglion cell degeneration and/or inner retina degeneration in Retinitis pigmentosa patients. The rate and patterns of progression will be correlated to the outer retina layers as well as clinical and genetic data of patients. Secondary goal is to determine potential parameters for optogenetic treatment eligibility.
NCT05841862
Pilot, randomized, observer and participant masked, sham and fellow eye controlled, interventional clinical device trail to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the 2C-QD device to improve visual function in adults with advanced Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP).
NCT06787482
Summary of the Study This clinical trial evaluates a novel peptide-based therapy for treating retinal dystrophies, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and diabetic retinopathy (DR). The therapy consists of peptides derived from fetal tissues, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), and bioactive growth factors, administered sublingually for systemic absorption. Study Objectives: Primary Objectives: Assess safety and tolerability, and evaluate the therapy's effects on retinal function and structure. Secondary Objectives: Explore improvements in visual acuity, retinal thickness, vascular health, and disease biomarkers. Study Design: Type: Open-label, single-arm interventional study. Duration: 12 months. Participants: 150 adults, divided into three cohorts: Retinal dystrophies. AMD (dry and wet forms). DR (moderate NPDR and PDR). Intervention: A sublingual solution containing peptides and growth factors, taken 4 times daily. Outcome Measures: Primary Outcomes: Safety (adverse events) and tolerability (treatment adherence). Secondary Outcomes: Functional: Visual acuity and field sensitivity improvements. Structural: Retinal thickness and vascular health. Biomarkers: Serum VEGF, oxidative stress, and inflammatory markers. Study Procedures: Monthly follow-ups for safety monitoring, vision tests, retinal imaging (OCT, FA), and blood biomarker analysis. Comprehensive evaluations at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months. Significance: The study aims to provide an innovative, non-invasive treatment for debilitating retinal conditions, potentially improving vision and retinal health through systemic therapy.
NCT05147701
This trial will study the safety and efficacy of intravenous and sub-tenon delivery of cultured allogeneic adult umbilical cord derived mesenchymal stem cells for the treatment of non-arteritic ischemic optic neuropathy