Effect of Aflibercept on Human Corneal Endothelial Cells in Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration
- Sponsor
- Ulucanlar Eye Training and Research Hospital
- Study ID
- NCT03313401
- Status
- Completed
Conditions
- Age Related Macular Degeneration
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 55 Years - 76 Years
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Interventions
- Aflibercept — DRUGIntravitreal aflibercept injection
- Specular microscopy — DEVICESpecular microscopy measurement after intravitreal aflibercept injection
Study Details
Aflibercept is the most recently developed VEGF inhibitor with a recombinant fusion protein consisting of human VEGF receptor extracellular domains from receptors 1 and 2 (VEGFR1 and VEGFR2) fused to the Fc domain of human IgG. Although both ranibizumab and bevacizumab have been shown not to have harmful effects on corneal endothelium, the effect of intravitreal aflibercept on human corneal endothelium has not been reported so far. Considering the functional importance of the corneal endothelium, particularly in aged population, the present study was designed to evaluate the in vivo toxicity of aflibercept on human corneal endothelial cells in patients with neovascular AMD. This study showed that intravitreal injection of clinically effective doses of aflibercept for four times on average during the 6-month period do not induce any harmful effect on human corneal endothelium evaluated by specular microscopy. Further prospective, large-scale, prolonged studies are needed to confirm that intravitreal aflibercept can be used safely without any corneal toxicity to treat neovascular AMD.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Jan 31, 2017
- Status verified
- Oct 2017
- Primary completion
- May 31, 2017
- Completion
- Jun 30, 2017
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 34 participants (actual)
Primary Outcome Measure
specular microscopic evaluation of corneal endothelium [ Time Frame: Before the first intravitreal aflibercept injection and 1, 3, 6 months after the intravitreal aflibercept injection ]
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