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Age Related Macular Degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of blindness in North America. This condition causes a progressive loss of central vision, the part of your vision that allows you to read, drive and see images in sharp detail directly in front of you. The wet form of AMD is characterized by the growth and leakage of small blood vessels into the choroid layer of the eye, or the back of the eye. These leaking blood vessels disrupt the structure and function of the eye, causing loss of vision, particularly the sharp vision created by the macula area of the eye.
Currently, the best treatment for wet AMD is a series of injections of an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) drug, ranibizumab (Lucentis). The clinical response to treatment is varied. Approximately 70% of patients see a moderate vision gain (3-line gain on a visual acuity chart), but there are 30% who do not see a similar improvement in vision. There is no way to identify those patients who will respond with significant vision gain versus those who will not experience moderate vision gain. Recent research into AMD has demonstrated that genetic mutations are proving to be key risk factors for patients developing wet AMD, with up to 80% of wet AMD cases explained by inherited genetic variations. Scientists have theorized that there may be a genetic difference between those patients who see significant responses to treatment and those who do not. The investigators will be testing participant's genetic profile using the Macula Risk test and following their progress through the standard treatment for wet AMD over the course of this study. This study aims to demonstrate the association between known genetic variations and patient responses to treatment.
Full description
Your ophthalmologist will determine your suitability for this study through a screening protocol. You will have measurements of your visual acuity and will undergo a series of imaging tests as described in the next paragraph to show presence of blood vessel growth in the back of your eye (the choroid). You cannot be included in this study if you have another significant eye disease that affects your vision, if you have blood vessel growth in the back of your eye (choroid) for reasons other than AMD, if you have medically uncontrolled glaucoma, if you have been treated for AMD in that past, if you have had intra-ocular surgery in the study eye in the past 3 months, if you have had any past retinal or vitreous surgery, or if you have physical or mental disabilities that would prevent accurate vision testing.
At the beginning of the study, we will take a sample of cells from the inside of your cheek, using a small swab. The sample will be sent to a genetic laboratory for analysis and storage. This information will be kept masked for the duration of the study, meaning that you, the study ophthalmologist and the data analyzer will not know the results of the genetic test until the study is completed.
You will be asked to come in for an initial assessment to determine your starting visual abilities and medical history. On your next appointment, you will receive your first treatment of intra-vitreal injections of Ranibizumab (Lucentis). You will be asked to come into the clinic every month for six (6) months total for treatment injections and testing. At each appointment, we will take 3-D images of your retina (the back of your eye) using an Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) imaging device, test your eye pressure and determine if there are any signs of infection or inflammation from the injections. On months 1, 3, and 6 we will also test your vision, your contrast sensitivity using a standard contrast sensitivity chart (The Pelli-Robson chart) and take images of the blood vessel growth using a coloured dye (fluorescein) to help us see your vessels. Before every treatment, anesthetic eye drops (proparacaine) will be applied to your eye so you will not feel the injections. You will be given antibiotic eye drops (Zymar®) that you will be asked to use 4 times a day for a few days after the injection to prevent infection.
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70 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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