Tests in a mouse model of macular degeneration have shown that anti-depressant drugs already on the market prevent damage to the light cells in the retina. In a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a University of Wisconsin—Madison research team pinpoints how immune abnormalities beneath the retina result in macular degeneration. [Read More]
Author: droberts
For Some, Switching ANTI-VEGF Treatments Midstream Could Be Harmful
Switching from Lucentis to Eylea could result in worsening of the retinal condition of some people with wet (exudative) AMD. Since the advent of anti-VEGF drug treatments for wet AMD, research has verified that blood vessel growth and leakage (neovascularization) usually diminishes in patients who are switched from either Lucentis or Avastin to Eylea. A small [Read More]
Summary of Research and Development — 2016
ILVSG Presentation June 2016 Dan Roberts I. INTRODUCTION This is my 11th annual summary of leading research and developments that have occurred during the past 12 months in the field of blindness and low vision. I’ll take the liberty in several cases of quoting the sources, but for the sake of conversational flow, I’ll break [Read More]
Visual Impairment and Blindness in U.S. May Double by 2050
The findings of a recent study suggest that there is a need for increased screening and interventions to identify and address treatable causes of vision loss. With the youngest of the baby boomers hitting 65 by 2029, the number of people with visual impairment or blindness in the United States is expected to double to [Read More]
OPT-302 Enters Phase 2A Trials for Wet AMD
Opthea Limited, a developer of novel biologic therapies for the treatment of eye diseases, has randomized and dosed the first patient in the Phase 2A dose expansion clinical trial of OPT-302 for wet AMD. OPT-302 is a soluble form of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3 (VEGFR-3) or ‘Trap’ molecule, that blocks the activity of two [Read More]