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Treatment of Advanced Dry Age Related Macular Degeneration With AAVCAGsCD59 - Trial NCT03144999

Access comprehensive clinical trial information for NCT03144999 through Pure Global AI's free database. This Phase 1 trial is sponsored by Janssen Research & Development, LLC and is currently Completed. The study focuses on Dry Age-related Macular Degeneration. Target enrollment is 17 participants.

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NCT03144999
Phase 1
Completed
biological
Trial Details
ClinicalTrials.gov โ€ข NCT03144999
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Treatment of Advanced Dry Age Related Macular Degeneration With AAVCAGsCD59
A Phase 1, Open-Label, Multi-Center, Dose-Escalating, Safety and Tolerability Study of a Single Intravitreal Injection of AAVCAGsCD59 in Patients With Advanced Non-Exudative (Dry) Age-Related Macular Degeneration With Geographic Atrophy

Study Focus

AAVCAGsCD59

Interventional

biological

Sponsor & Location

Janssen Research & Development, LLC

Boston, United States of America

Timeline & Enrollment

Phase 1

Mar 29, 2017

Dec 09, 2019

17 participants

Primary Outcome

Number of participants experiencing ocular and systemic adverse events as graded by CTCAE v4.0

Summary

Age related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of vision loss in individuals
 over age 60. AMD is classified as wet and dry. Wet AMD constitutes 10 to 15% of all cases of
 AMD and occurs when an abnormal blood vessel grows in or under the retina leading to central
 vision loss. Wet AMD is successfully treated with injections in the eye on a monthly basis
 that stop the blood vessel from growing and leaking. The most common form of AMD is the dry
 variant or dry AMD that affects 85 to 90% of all patients with AMD. In dry AMD, there is loss
 of retinal pigment, formation of deposits called drusen, and loss of the vessels in a layer
 of the retina called the choriocapillaris. In the most severe forms of dry AMD there is loss
 of retinal tissue called geographic atrophy. Over time retinal tissue degenerates in the area
 responsible for central vision leading to vision loss leading to legal blindness. Currently
 no treatment for dry AMD exists so that there is a significant unmet need in patients with
 this ocular disease.
 
 Recently, evidence has implicated an overactive inflammatory cascade called the complement
 system as playing a pivotal role in the development of dry AMD. The complement cascade
 consists of 3 arms that converge to form a pore-like complex on the surface of cells called
 the membrane attack complex (MAC). Accumulation of MAC on cell surfaces leads to cell damage
 and death causing the clinical findings seen in AMD. Normal cells within the human body
 produce a protein on their cell surfaces called CD59 that blocks the MAC from forming. In
 AMD, the complement cascade is upregulated and leads to more MAC formation than the body can
 protect itself against leading to cell destruction.
 
 AAVCAGsCD59, an ocular gene therapy product that is injected in to the eye in the physician's
 office, causes normal retinal cells to increase the expression of a soluble form of CD59
 (sCD59). This soluble recombinant version of the naturally occurring CD59 is designed and
 intended to protect retinal cells that are responsible for central vision by inhibiting the
 formation of the membrane attack complex (MAC), the terminal step of complement-mediated cell
 lysis. In gene therapy the cells of the retina are potentially permanently altered to make
 sCD59 for the life of the patient. With gene therapy only one injection is needed for the
 drug to be effective for the patient's entire life. This study will evaluate the safety after
 a single injection of AAVCAGsCD59 administered in an office setting for patients whose
 enrolled eye has advanced dry AMD with geographic atrophy. The initial study is 26 weeks
 followed by an additional 18-month safety evaluation.

ICD-10 Classifications

Peripheral retinal degeneration
Corneal degeneration
Hereditary retinal dystrophy
Optic atrophy in diseases classified elsewhere
Disorders of choroid and retina

Data Source

ClinicalTrials.gov

NCT03144999

Non-Device Trial