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This is a prospective, observational, multi-center, study. The study will be conducted in approximately 12 ophthalmological clinics and practices throughout Greece. It is planned to collect data on treatment of wet Age related Macular Degeneration (wAMD) from about 120 patients for which the decision to treat with intravitreal aflibercept injections is made at the discretion of the attending physician, according to his/her medical practice. Visits will be performed at baseline, aflibercept first injection (if different from enrollment) and at 12 and 24 months. The 12 and 24 month comprise the data collection visits during which any data generated in the period preceding these visits will be recorded.
All required information for the purposes of this study will be collected using electronic Case Record Form (eCRF). The web-based electronic data capture (EDC) application will be specifically designed for the needs of the study and will adhere to all applicable data protection regulations and requirements with regard to electronic records.
The study observation period for each patient enrolled in this study is the time from the beginning of treatment with intravitreal aflibercept injection up to two years or until discontinuation of intravitreal aflibercept injection-treatment due to any reason including withdrawal of consent or patient loss from follow-up.
Full description
Rationale and background Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the most common degenerative disease of the macula and the most common cause of legal blindness in the Western world. AMD is a disease of the elderly affecting 10% of individuals aged 65 to 74 years and 30% of those aged 75 to 85 years. Two forms of AMD can be distinguished. The dry form is more benign accounting for 90% of all AMD cases, but only for 10% of cases of blindness due to AMD. On the other hand wet AMD affects only 10% of AMD patients. However, it is more aggressive and rapidly progresses. Wet AMD (wAMD) accounts for 80% of cases of severe visual impairment and represents the majority of cases of legal blindness. Thus, wet or neovascular AMD is a disease with a great impact on both visual acuity and patients' quality of life.
About 1% of the population is affected by wAMD between 65-74 years of age, 5% between 75-84 years of age and 13% in people 85+ years. Given that wAMD is a strongly age-dependent disease its prevalence is expected to significantly increase in western countries (including Greece) in the near future. Therefore, early diagnosis and proper treatment will be a major public health concern.
AMD is diagnosed by stereoscopic biomicroscopy and additional examinations of the macula, such as fluorescein angiography (FA), indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) and optical coherence tomography (OCT). The patient's visual status can be monitored with the Snellen chart and Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) chart, the Snellen chart being most often used in Greece.
Wet AMD is caused by choroidal neovascularization (CNV) whereby new abnormal blood vessels spread beneath the retina. These vessels may rupture and cause retinal damage. In addition, vascular leakage may cause thickening and oedema of the retina, which is thought to contribute to vision loss. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and placental growth factor (PlGF) play a pivotal role in this scenario. VEGF-A and PlGF are members of the VEGF family of angiogenic factors that act as potent mitogenic, chemotactic, and vascular permeability factors for endothelial cells. VEGF acts via two receptor tyrosine kinases-VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2-which are located on the surface of endothelial cells. PlGF binds only to VEGFR-1, which is also present on the surface of leukocytes. Excessive activation of these receptors by VEGF-A can induce pathological neovascularization and excessive vascular permeability. PlGF can synergize with VEGF-A in these processes, and is also known to promote leukocyte infiltration and vascular inflammation.
Treatment paradigms for wet AMD have changed tremendously since anti-VEGF treatment (inhibition of all VEGF-A Isoforms) was introduced. As a consequence, most previous therapy approaches lost significance and are applied in rare cases only. The pan-anti-angiogenesis treatment with ranibizumab was the first to show significant improvements in visual acuity of patients suffering from wAMD, thus becoming the first-choice therapy for most patients. The phase III clinical trials MARINA and ANCHOR have shown that ranibizumab applied every month is highly effective in improving visual impairment. However, in addition to the small risk of endophthalmitis associated with intravitreal injections, monthly treatment, which may continue for a patient's lifetime, is extremely burdensome to patients, their caregivers, ophthalmologists and the healthcare system. As a consequence, in clinical practice the monthly treatment regimen of ranibizumab is often altered to less frequent dosing intervals to reduce the associated treatment burden, although this may result in notably reduced efficacy.
Results from observational studies such as WAVE and AURA, which investigated wAMD patients treated with Lucentis (ranibizumab) in a real life setting in western countries, suggest that these patients are not treated according to a continuous treatment pattern and are also undertreated resulting in suboptimal treatment effects. In the WAVE Study (n=2587) patients received 4.3 injections during the first treatment year and the visual acuity returned to the baseline visual acuity at the end of the year. In the AURA study (n=420), German cohort, patients received 4.3 injections in the first year and only 2.1 injections during the second year. The visual acuity declined during year 1 to -1.4 letters and further declined to -2.4 letters during year 2 compared to baseline. In the AURA study (n =365), Italian cohort, patients received 3.9 injections in the first year and only 1.4 injections during the second year. The visual acuity declined during year 1 to 0 letters and further declined to -2.9 letters during year 2 compared to baseline .
Intravitreal aflibercept is the next generation of anti-angiogenesis treatments which also introduces a new proactive every-other-month treatment regimen (after 3 monthly injections) in the first year, followed by individually extended treatment intervals afterwards. Aflibercept is a fusion protein consisting of portions of human VEGF receptors 1 and 2 extracellular domains fused to the Fc portion of human IgG1. It is purified and formulated as a solution for intravitreal use. As such, aflibercept acts as a soluble decoy receptor that binds VEGF-A and PlGF with higher affinity than naturally occurring VEGF receptors. Thus aflibercept competitively inhibits VEGF-A and PIGF binding to the cognate VEGF receptors and their activation.
Intravitreal aflibercept was recently approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) in November 2012. The aims of this study are to collect data on the effectiveness of intravitreal aflibercept and to evaluate follow-up as well as treatment patterns in treatment naive patients with wAMD in routine clinical practice in Greece treated with intravitreal aflibercept injection.
Research questions and objectives The main objectives of this observational study are to evaluate the effectiveness of intravitreal aflibercept injection and to describe routine clinical practice monitoring and treatment patterns in treatment-naïve wAMD patients in Greece.
Primary objective
The primary objective in this study is:
Secondary objective(s)
The secondary objectives in this study are:
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119 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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