54 research outputs found

    Safety and Efficacy of Risuteganib in Intermediate Non-exudative Age-Related Macular Degeneration

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    Purpose : Risuteganib is a small synthetic peptide that regulates select integrin functions involved in the pathogenesis of dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD). This study evaluated the safety and efficay of risuteganib for the treatment of dry AMD. Methods : Randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled Phase 2 study in eyes with intermediate dry AMD presenting with best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) between 20/40-20/200 was conducted across multiple centers in the United States. Patients were randomized to receive either intravitreal 1.0mg risuteganib or sham injection at baseline. At week 16, patients in the risuteganib group received a second dose and the sham group crossed over and receive a single dose of 1.0mg risuteganib. The primary endpoint was the percentage of population with ≥ 8 letters BCVA gain from baseline to week 28 in 1.0mg risuteganib vs baseline to week 12 for sham. Results : Forty-five patients were enrolled in the study. At baseline, mean patient age was 78.8 and 75.9 years and mean baseline BCVA was 67.1 and 64.4 letters in the sham and risuteganib groups, respectively. The primary endpoint was met; 48% of patients in the risuteganib group at week 28 and 7% of patients in the sham group at week 12 gained > 8 letters from baseline (p=0.013). Of the risuteganib treated patients, 20% gained > 15 letters at week 28; no patients in the sham group at week 12 had this gain. On a post-hoc masked analysis by 2 independent reading centers, greater outer retinal and photoreceptor thickness and volume and smaller ellipsoid zone defect area in the central 1 mm zone at baseline were associated with increased BCVA response to risuteganib. Risuteganib demonstrated a good safety profile in this study. Conclusions : Risuteganib showed significant benefit over sham in patients with dry AMD with respect to proportion of patients gaining > 8 letters of BCVA from baseline. Furthermore, post hoc analysis provides preliminary insights into baseline anatomic features that may help to determine likelihood of BCVA response to risuteganib. These findings will be confirmed in an upcoming larger trial

    NBS1 expression as a prognostic marker in uveal melanoma

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    Purpose: Up to half of uveal melanoma patients die of metastatic disease. Treatment of the primary eye tumor does not improve survival in high-risk patients due to occult micrometastatic disease, which is present at the time of eye tumor diagnosis but is not detected and treated until months to years later. Here, we use microarray gene expression data to identify a new prognostic marker. Experimental Design: Microarray gene expression profiles were analyzed in 25 primary uveal melanomas. Tumors were ranked by support vector machine (SVM) and by cytologic severity. Nbs1 protein expression was assessed by quantitative immunohistochemistry in 49 primary uveal melanomas. Survival was assessed using Kaplan-Meier lifetable analysis. Results: Expression of the Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS1) gene correlated strongly with SVM and cytologic tumor rankings (P < 0.0001). Further, immunohistochemistry expression of the Nbs1 protein correlated strongly with both SVM and cytologic rankings (P < 0.0001). The 6-year actuarial survival was 100 % in patients with low immunohistochemistry expression of Nbs1 and 22 % in those with high Nbs1 expression (P = 0.01). Conclusions: NBS1 is a strong predictor of uveal melanoma survival and potentially could be used as a clinical marker for guiding clinical management

    NBS1

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