Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This observational study aims to enhance the description of the different ways Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA) affects vision. The latest technology and knowledge are used to improve how we diagnose and predict patient outcomes. GCA is the most frequent vasculitis, an inflammation of vessels, in older adults. It involves large and medium-sized arteries and causes ischemic alterations such as stroke and blindness, through damage of extracranial arteries.
The primary objective is to compare the frequency of the various ocular findings between the main alterations of arteritic and non-arteritic aetiology, such as Arteritic Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy (A-AION) Vs. Non-Arteritic Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy (NA-AION) or Central Retinal Artery Occlusion (CRAO) from GCA Vs. from other causes, through a comprehensive clinical and instrumental evaluation.
Full description
Giant-cell arteritis (GCA) is an idiopathic inflammatory condition affecting medium- and large-sized arteries. This condition typically affects females over 50, with a peak incidence in the eighth decade of life. It is a rare disease, with an annual incidence in southern Europe (including Italy) of approximately 12/100000 inhabitants aged > 50 years. This clinical condition has considerable heterogeneity among patients, with different clinical phenotypes recognised, predominantly involving the large vessel (LV-GCA) and the medium-sized arteries of the cephalic district (cGCA). The main complications of cephalic involvement are ischaemic events such as stroke and optic involvement. Visual involvement is a minor but the main prognostic factor in patients with GCA, as it can lead to irreversible vision loss. Patients with visual involvement often exhibit other disease features but with a less intense inflammatory response compared to subjects without visual involvement. Ocular involvement occurs with a wide clinical spectrum of ocular manifestations, from amaurosis fugax and diplopia to permanent loss of visual capacity. This irreversible or partially reversible visual impairment is mainly linked to three mechanisms:
Various unmet needs in the ophthalmological literature could impact on the management of patients with acute visual impairment in suspected GCA:
This observational study aims to improve the ophthalmological description of different visual involvement phenotypes in GCA. This will be achieved by utilizing state-of-the-art technology and nosographic knowledge to improve patient diagnosis and prognostic stratification.
The primary objective is a comparison of the frequency of the various semeiological findings by multi-parametric evaluation, among the main pathological ocular alterations of arteritic and non-arteritic aetiology (e.g. A-AION Vs. NA-AION, CRAO from arteritis Vs. CRAO from other causes). The second objectives are:
This prospective study enrolls patients referred to the emergency room or ophthalmology outpatient clinic for new-onset visual symptoms, for which they will perform the clinical, laboratory and instrumental examinations required by existing clinical practice. For patients with suspected GCA, venous blood samples (18 ml per sample) are scheduled at baseline, and at times 7 days, 3 months and 6 months.
Clinical management and treatment will follow international recommendations per the 2021 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and 2018 European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology (EULAR) guidelines, due to the progression of acute visual impairment leading to permanent visual loss. Ophthalmological assessment will be scheduled at baseline (T0), which is repeated after 48-72 hours (T1), 7 ± 2 days (T2), 4 ± 1 weeks (T3), 12 ± 2 weeks (T4) and 26 ± 2 weeks (T5). At each time point, the evaluation includes an assessment of visual acuity, fundus, and visual field. The ophthalmologist frequently recommends fluorescein (FAG) and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA), OCT with high-resolution technique, and OCT-A. In addition to the ophthalmological assessment, patients will also undergo an internal and immuno-rheumatological evaluation to address the management and treatment of the underlying condition causing the visual impairment. Internal or immuno-rheumatology follow-up will depend on the underlying diagnosis and follow normal clinical practice.
In case of suspected ocular flare-up, the ophthalmologist may consider performing a full or partial ophthalmological work-up based on clinical need. The clinical-instrumental data obtained from the ophthalmological assessments will be collected in a standardised electronic database according to the variables described in the case report form (CRF).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
For GCA group:
For control group:
Exclusion criteria
Pre-existing ophthalmological pathologies that may modify best visual acuity and/or alter ophthalmological semeiotics.
Concomitant active viral, bacterial, fungal and parasitic infections, including active or latent tuberculosis treated for less than 4 weeks and HIV, hepatitis C virus (HCV)
/hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections, involving the eyes and orbital cavities.
Concomitant systemic inflammations not attributable to GCA (inflammatory diseases in treatment-free remission are not excluded).
Any other condition judged by the investigators to be a contraindication of eligibility
762 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Enrico Tombetti, Prof.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal