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Active clinical trials for "Uveitis"

Results 61-70 of 318

Safety and Efficacy of AIN457 in Patients With Active Non-infectious Uveitis

Uveitis

This study will assess the safety and efficacy of AIN457 as adjunctive therapy for the treatment of intermediate uveitis, posterior uveitis, or panuveitis requiring systemic immunosuppression.

Terminated25 enrollment criteria

An Open-label, Rollover Study Providing Continued Dosing of Gevokizumab in Order to Assess Long-term...

Uveitis

The purpose of this study is to provide continued dosing of gevokizumab in order to obtain and assess long-term gevokizumab safety data.

Terminated3 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety Study of Gevokizumab to Treat Behcet's Disease Uveitis

Behcet's Disease Uveitis

The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of gevokizumab in treating Behcet's disease uveitis (BDU).

Terminated11 enrollment criteria

Long-term Safety of Gevokizumab in the Treatment of Patients With Chronic Non-infectious Uveitis...

Chronic Uveitis

The objective of this study is to evaluate long-term safety of gevokizumab in patient with chronic non-infectious uveitis who previously well tolerated the study drug and may benefit from longterm treatment with gevokizumab.

Terminated8 enrollment criteria

Macular Edema Nepafenac vs. Difluprednate Uveitis Trial

UveitisMacular Edema

Macular edema is a condition in which there is swelling in the macula, the part of the retina that gives you your best vision. This swelling can cause your vision to decline. When diagnosed early and treated, you vision usually can be preserved. However, if the swelling goes untreated for a long time, it can cause permanent vision loss. We think that the three eye drop regimens in this study, difluprednate, difluprednate plus nepafenac, and prednisolone acetate plus nepafenac, might be effective in treating uveitic macular edema. Patients who enter this study are randomized to one of the three regimens and followed for 24 weeks.

Terminated26 enrollment criteria

Open Label Study of Acthar SQ Gel Injection in Patients With Active Anterior Uveitis

Uveitis

Uveitis is an acute or chronic inflammatory condition of unknown etiology. Although uveitis often responds adequately to topical corticosteroids, there are many patients for which this treatment is either inadequate or not tolerated. A patient with inadequate response to treatment would manifest uveitis activity by slit lamp examination determination of anterior chamber cellularity. Lack of tolerance of therapy commonly manifests as ocular hypertension (greater than 21 mmHg measured by tonometry)complicating chronic topical corticosteroid administration, leading to glaucoma and permanent visual loss. Moreover, systemic corticosteroids may be required at a dose unsafe for chronic administration. In these situations, an immunosuppressive medication is often added as a "steroid-sparing" agent. If and when there is clinical response to the added immunosuppressive, the oral and/or topical corticosteroid dose can be reduced or eliminated to avoid toxicity. There are several reasons for believing that Acthar might be beneficial in the treatment of uveitis patients. In addition to increasing adrenal production or cortisol, Acthar has another important mechanisms of action mediated by its binding of melanocortin receptors. Melanocortin down-regulates activity of B and T lymphocytes, monocytes and macrophages. In animal studies, melanocortin peptides down-regulate T helper cells, up-regulate T Regulatory cells, and decrease B lymphocyte production of B Lymphocyte Stimulator. In macrophages, there is down-regulation of IL-1, IL-2, INF gamma, TNF alpha, nitric oxide and adhesion molecules. In other cells, in addition to IL-10 upregulation (monocytes), there is down-regulation of VACM and ECAM (endothelial cells), prostaglandins (fibroblasts) and MCP-1 and RANTES (renal tubules).CNS mediation of systemic inflammation may also be down-regulated by melanocortin receptor binding by Acthar.

Terminated11 enrollment criteria

Golimumab for the Treatment of Refractory Behcet's Uveitis

Behcet SyndromeUveitis

The aim of this single-center prospective study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Golimumab (GOL), fully humanized anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α monoclonal antibody, in the treatment of refractory Uveitis of Behçet's disease (BDU), to verify its effects on decreasing the dose of cortical steroids, and to determine whether it can reduce BDU recurrence.

Terminated3 enrollment criteria

Effects of Conbercept in Refractory Uveitic Macular Edema and VEGF

UveitisMacular Edema2 more

As a primary exploratory study, this study aims to evaluate the short-term effectiveness of intravitreal Conbercept injection in UME, and to explore the correlation between inflammatory factors like VEGF and the responsiveness to treatment.

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy Study of Gevokizumab to Treat Active Non-infectious Uveitis

Uveitis

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of gevokizumab in the treatment of active non-infectious intermediate, posterior, or pan- uveitis.

Terminated12 enrollment criteria

Safety and Preliminary Efficacy Study of V404 PDS in Uveitis

UveitisPosterior2 more

This study is intended to evaluate the safety of V404 PDS in patients with chronic non-infectious uveitis. Secondarily, the study will evaluate whether V404 PDS can provide clinically measurable benefit over an extended period of time in patients with chronic non-infectious uveitis.

Terminated16 enrollment criteria
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