Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02033031

Long-term Treatment Effect of Intravitreal Ant-VEGF in Branch Retinal Vein Occlusion

Treatment With Anti-vascular Endothelial Growth Factor in Patients With Branch Retinal Vein Occlusion: 5 Years of Clinical Experience

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
28 (actual)
Sponsor
Medical University of Vienna · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Retinal vein occlusion (RVO) is the second leading cause of retinal vascular disease in patients older than 50 years.The prevalence varies from 0.7% to 1.6% in the literature. Visual recovery depends on ischemic damage of the retina, the occurence of macular edema (ME) and the development of neovascular glaucoma. The occurence of ME is the main reason for visual loss and frustrates visual recovery among patients with both central or branch RVO. Therapeutic options that have been used and discussed over the years are the treatment with anticoagulants, fibrinolytics, corticosteroids, acetazolamide and isovolemic haemodilution. Furthermore, surgical options like vitrectomy and radial optic neurotomy were used. Panretinal photocoagulation and grid pattern photocoagulation had established as additional tool to induce chorioretinal anastomosis. Nevertheless, the effectiveness and the evidence of these different treatment options could not be verified and remains mostly unknown. Nowadays, intravitreal anti-VEGF application had become the treatment of choice for ME secondary to RVO. Multi-center studies have already shown the effectiveness of anti-VEGF treatment to reduce intraretinal fluid and retinal hemorrhages (BRAVO, CRUISE). Unfortunately, often high numbers of re-treatments become necessary over the years. In our knowledge, there are no reports showing more than 3 years treatment effects of antiangiogenic drugs in patients with BRVO. However, the results of treatment effect longer than 3 years are important, as the mean age \< 70 years with an onset of BRVO has been estimated in about 60% of all cases. In addition, most patients with regard to the application of anti-VEGF treatment in real clinical setting, there is only rare experience concerning need of optimum time duration for follow-up at the departments. Hence, the present study aimed to evaluate the long-term clinical outcomes, safety and therapeutic benefit of a flexible dosing regimen of intravitreal anti-VEGF therapy in patients with ME secondary to BRVO.

Detailed description

This cross-sectional study evaluates a series of patients with ME due to RVO who were available for at least 4 years' follow-up examination. The patients received either intravitreal ranibizumab (IVR) or bevacizumab (IVB) in a flexible dosing regimen

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGLucentis intravitreal injectionLucentis intravitreal injection
DRUGAvastin intravitreal injectionAvastin intravitreal injection

Timeline

Start date
2012-08-01
Primary completion
2012-11-01
Completion
2013-02-01
First posted
2014-01-10
Last updated
2014-01-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Austria

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02033031. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.