Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT00506675

Combined Patching-Atropine for Residual Amblyopia

A Randomized Trial to Evaluate Combined Patching-Atropine for Residual Amblyopia

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
55 (actual)
Sponsor
Jaeb Center for Health Research · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
3 Years – 9 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study is designed to evaluate the effectiveness of treatment of residual amblyopia in children ages 3 to \< 10 years with visual acuity of 20/32 to 20/63 in the amblyopic eye. The study is a randomized clinical trial comparing intensive treatment (42 hours per week of patching plus daily atropine) with a control group that will have rapid weaning of existing treatment followed by spectacle correction only (if needed). The primary objective is to determine if this intensive treatment will improve visual acuity in patients with residual amblyopia. The primary outcome assessment is amblyopic eye visual acuity at 10 weeks. The primary analytic approach for the amblyopic eye acuity will be a treatment group comparison of the proportion of patients with at least two lines of visual acuity improvement.

Detailed description

Amblyopia is the most common cause of monocular visual impairment in both children and young and middle-aged adults. Both patching and atropine are accepted treatment modalities for the management of moderate amblyopia in children. Despite best efforts with conventional treatment, some patients fail to achieve normal visual acuity in the amblyopic eye. In a randomized trial conducted by PEDIG comparing atropine versus patching in 3 to 6 year olds with moderate amblyopia (ATS1), 261 of 402 patients (65%) had amblyopic eye visual acuity of 20/32 or worse after 6 months of treatment with patching or atropine. Beyond 6 months, treatment was at investigator discretion, and two years after randomization, 181 of 363 children (50%) still had amblyopic eye visual acuity of 20/32 or worse. In a randomized trial conducted by PEDIG comparing patching regimens, 129 of 181 patients with moderate amblyopia (71%) and 145 of 157 patients with severe amblyopia (92%) had amblyopic eye visual acuity of 20/32 or worse after 4 months of occlusion therapy. Many patients receive treatment beyond 6 months but still fail to achieve normal visual acuity in the amblyopic eye. It is unknown whether an intensive "final push" of combined treatment with daily patching and atropine will improve visual acuity in these patients. Although some clinicians prescribe simultaneous patching and atropine for selected patients, there are no published reports of its effectiveness. Also, we are not aware of reports of response to treatment of residual amblyopia. The study has been designed as a simple trial that, other than the type of amblyopia therapy being determined through the randomization process, approximates standard clinical practice. Patients will be randomized to one of two treatment regimens: * Intensive treatment: 42 hours per week of patching combined with daily atropine (1%) * Control group: Weaning of the current treatment (two hours of daily patching for patients currently using patching and once weekly atropine for patients currently using atropine) for 4 weeks, then no treatment other than spectacles (if needed).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEPatching42 hours per week of patching
DRUGAtropinedaily atropine (1%)
DEVICEPatchingtwo hours of daily patching for 4 weeks, then no treatment
DRUGAtropineonce weekly atropine for 4 weeks, then no treatment

Timeline

Start date
2007-10-01
Primary completion
2009-04-01
Completion
2009-09-01
First posted
2007-07-25
Last updated
2016-07-13
Results posted
2011-03-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00506675. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.