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Background:
Uveitis refers to a large group of inflammatory diseases in the eye. The inflammation can be caused by many factors, such as trauma, medicine, or infection. It can also be caused by systemic diseases. Uveitis and ocular inflammation can cause vision loss. Both children and adults can have uveitis. Standard treatment is to suppress the immune system. But this can result in high costs as well as bad side effects. Researchers want to look at data from NEI studies. They want to learn more about how uveitis progresses and responds to treatment.
Objective:
To find biomarkers to better understand uveitic diseases, assess disease severity, and create outcome measures of response to treatment and disease activity.
Eligibility:
People ages 4 and older from certain NEI studies who have uveitis or ocular inflammation, and healthy volunteers
Design:
Data will be taken from NEI studies from January 1, 2000, to December 31, 2025. Data will only be collected for participants who agreed to let their data be used for future research. No new tests will be done on any samples.
Laboratory results and images will be used. Medical chart data, such as symptoms, medicine history, and treatment course, will be used. Personal data, such as name, medical record number, and date of birth, will be used.
COVID-19 has been reported to cause eye changes. Exam findings of participants who had COVID-19 will be reviewed as well.
Machine learning will be used to study the data.
This study will take place at the NIH Clinical Center. All data will be securely stored.
Full description
Study Description: Uveitis refers to a large group of intraocular inflammatory diseases that can cause devastating visual loss in adults and children. This is a retrospective study to identify factors and biomarkers that are relevant to the pathogenesis, progression, and treatment response in inflammatory eye conditions.
Objectives:
The primary objective is to identify ocular imaging, clinical and laboratory biomarkers in order to better classify presentations of uveitic diseases, assess disease severity and develop outcome measures of response to treatment. The secondary objectives are to identify etiological factors for uveitic diseases including through using a machine-learning approach with external collaborators.
Study Population: The study population will be any patient with a diagnosis of uveitis or ocular inflammation enrolled in an IRB approved protocol since 2000.
Description of Sites/Facilities conducting research: Research will be conducted at the National Institutes of Health clinical center
Study Duration: Estimated study duration is 5 years
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
The study population will include subjects aged 4 or older and no upper limit for age will be set. All data will be derived only from subjects evaluated at the NEI eye clinic and enrolled in NEI protocols. This also applies to data from healthy volunteers.
Subjects evaluated under the IRB protocols.
AND
Have a diagnosis of uveitis, ocular inflammation, scleritis or a disease known to be associated with intraocular inflammation, (e.g., sarcoidosis, Beh(SqrRoot)(Beta)et s disease, multiple sclerosis (MS) and lymphoma or COVID-19 or other infections)
OR
Serve as a control:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Patients who were minors and NIH employees will be included in this retrospective study. The IRB approved protocols which these patients were managed under allow for the inclusion of these populations at time of original consent.
69 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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