(Press-News.org) There is no cure for age-related macular degeneration, an eye disease that is the leading cause of vision loss and blindness in older Americans. Last year, the National Institutes of Health reported that two drugs injected into the eyes, Avastin and Lucentis, eased symptoms for sufferers, especially those in the advanced, "wet" stage of the disease, when blood vessels in the eye become swollen and leak fluids in the eye.
Yet for some AMD patients, the two drugs either don't work for long or fail to work at all. It's a dead end for treatment, or so it seemed.
Now, a team of ophthalmologists at the University of Iowa has shown that a third drug, Eylea, can ease leaking and vision problems for wet AMD patients. In a study involving 31 AMD patients at the UI Hospitals and Clinics, researchers report that half of the eyes treated with Eylea had reduced fluid after three monthly injections. Moreover, in some cases subsequent bimonthly injections with Eylea were deemed as effective as monthly injections of Avastin and Lucentis over a similar time period, meaning fewer visits by patients and less cost.
"The challenge has been treating patients who are not very responsive to the first two drugs (Avastin and Lucentis). It was assumed that they would not respond to anything," says Vinit Mahajan, assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at the UI and corresponding author on the paper published online in the American Journal of Ophthalmology. "We are among the first to show that this drug can be effective in patients that were resistant to the first two drugs."
The patients who tried out Eylea were 79 years old on average. All had undergone eye injections with Avastin and Lucentis, some dozens of times. After three monthly injections of Eylea, half of the eyes treated (18) had less fluid in or around the retina. One in five of those patients also had improved vision after the initial rounds of treatment, according to the researchers, and nearly one in three had improved vision after six months of treatment.
"What this means is if you have a patient who's not responding to Avastin or Lucentis, they need to try this new drug," says Mahajan, who has no financial stake in Eylea's manufacturer, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. "There's a very reasonable chance they're going to do better with it."
All three drugs target swollen blood vessels in the eye, albeit through different pathways. Of AMD patients who respond well to Avastin (clinical name bevacizumab and manufactured by Genentech USA, Inc.) and Lucentis (clinical name ranibizumab and also manufactured by Genentech USA, Inc.), a minority develop a resistance to the drugs, and the leaking in their eyes restarts, followed by recurring vision loss. That development has sparked a wave of research to find other so-called anti-VEGF medications that can be used for AMD treatment. Eylea (clinical name aflibercept) is the latest to be approved for use.
The UI study was a pilot, designed to test Eylea's effectiveness in a small cohort for six months. Mahajan is quick to point out further studies are needed to fully evaluate the new drug's efficacy, and he would like to see a trial directly comparing the drugs. Until then, there is another option for AMD sufferers.
"We have a 50-50 chance of making previous nonresponders better," Mahajan says. "And 50-50 is a whole lot better than zero."
INFORMATION:
The first author on the paper is Benjamin Bakall, a fellow associate in ophthalmology at the UI. Bakall, Mahajan, and James Folk, an UI ophthalmologist, designed and conducted the research. Other contributing authors, all from the UI, are H. Culver Boldt, Elliott Sohn, Edwin Stone, and Stephen Russell.
The National Institutes of Health (grant no: K08EY 020530) funded the study.
New drug could help AMD sufferers
UI pilot study has promising results for age-related macular degeneration
2013-06-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Academics earn street cred with TED Talks but no points from peers, IU research shows
2013-06-19
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- TED Talks, the most popular conference and events website in the world with over 1 billion informational videos viewed, provides academics with increased popular exposure but does nothing to boost citations of their work by peers, new research led by Indiana University has found.
In the comprehensive study of over 1,200 TED Talks videos and their presenters, lead author Cassidy R. Sugimoto, an assistant professor in IU Bloomington's Department of Information and Library Science, and a team of researchers from Great Britain and Canada, also looked ...
CAMH policy study outlines ways to reduce alcohol harms
2013-06-19
TORONTO, June 18, 2013 /CNW/ - The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) has released a summary report outlining policy strategies to reduce the harms related to alcohol, with a focus on the province of Ontario, Canada.
In the report titled 'Reducing Alcohol-Related Harms and Costs in Ontario: A Provincial Summary Report,' CAMH Senior Scientist Norman Giesbrecht outlines Ontario's policy strengths and provides recommendations to help decrease the $2.9 billion attributed annually to the direct and indirect costs of alcohol use in Ontario.
"While there are policy ...
Computer modeling technique goes viral at Brandeis
2013-06-19
It's not a hacker lab. At Brandeis University, sophisticated computational models and advances in graphical processing units are helping scientists understand the complex interplay between genomic data, virus structure and the formation of the virus' outer "shell" — critical for replication.
"We hope that some of what we are finding will help researchers alter virus assembly, leaving viruses unable to replicate," says post-doctoral fellow Jason Perlmutter, first author of the scientific paper describing the technique, published in the open access journal eLife.
Scientists ...
Brandeis scientist invents anti-cholesterol process
2013-06-19
Senior Brandeis research scientist Daniel Perlman has discovered a way to make phytosterol molecules from plants dispersible in beverages and foods that are consumed by humans, potentially opening the way to dramatic reductions in human cholesterol levels.
A U.S. patent (#8,460,738) on the new process and composition was issued on June 11.
Phytosterols in plants and cholesterol molecules in animals are highly similar and when both are dispersed together they are attracted to one another. When they mix in the gut of an animal, the cholesterol molecules are competitively ...
Scientists discover new details about rice blast, a deadly plant fungus
2013-06-19
MANHATTAN, Kan. -- Like a stealthy enemy, blast disease invades rice crops around the world, killing plants and cutting production of one of the most important global food sources.
Now, a study by an international team of researchers has shed light on how the rice blast fungus, Magnaporthe oryzae, invades plant tissue. The finding is a step toward learning how to control the disease, which by some estimates destroys enough rice to feed 60 million people annually.
The team, led by Barbara Valent, Kansas State University distinguished professor in plant pathology, found ...
NOAA, partners predict possible record-setting deadzone for Gulf of Mexico
2013-06-19
Scientists are expecting a very large "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico and a smaller than average hypoxic level in the Chesapeake Bay this year, based on several NOAA-supported forecast models.
NOAA-supported modelers at the University of Michigan, Louisiana State University, and the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium are forecasting that this year's Gulf of Mexico hypoxic "dead" zone will be between 7,286 and 8,561 square miles which could place it among the ten largest recorded. That would range from an area the size of Connecticut, Rhode Island and the District ...
Geosphere details the geology of North America with 6 new papers online
2013-06-19
Boulder, Colo., USA – Each of the six new papers published in Geosphere on 13 June address geoscience compiled in specially themed issues: CRevolution 2: Origin and Evolution of the Colorado River System II; The 36-18 Ma southern Great Basin, USA, ignimbrite province and flareup: Swarms of subduction-related supervolcanoes; New Developments in Grenville Geology; and Origin and Evolution of the Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane.
Abstracts for these and other Geosphere papers are available at http://geosphere.gsapubs.org/. Representatives of the media may obtain complimentary ...
Bay Area thrushes nest together, winter together, and face change together
2013-06-19
Swainson' s Thrushes, from a local population near Bolinas, CA spend their winters together in Mexico, according to a new tracking study released by Point Blue Conservation Science, (Point Blue, formerly PRBO). This result is important because it shows that the conservation of habitat for these local populations in California is tightly linked with climate and habitat changes in Mexico, where these birds spend their winters, 1,600 miles away.
The Swainson's Thrush is one of the most melodic of all the songbirds, and can be heard singing now by hikers, walkers, and cyclists ...
The hidden agenda of Obama's opposition
2013-06-19
Is the US Tea Party movement a racial backlash against President Obama? A new study by Angie Maxwell from the University of Arkansas, and Wayne Parent from Louisiana State University, assesses whether racial attitudes are contributing to Tea Party membership, and if so, the exact nature of this racial prejudice. Their work is published online in Springer's journal, Race and Social Problems.
The Tea Party is an American political movement that began in 2009 and which is focused on fiscal conservatism. The first major protests took place in 40 states just 37 days after ...
Respect may be the key to stopping patient 'no shows'
2013-06-19
People with HIV are more likely to keep their scheduled medical appointments — and their disease under control — if they feel their physician listens, explains things clearly and knows them as a person, not just a "case," new Johns Hopkins research suggests.
"If people feel their doctor really knows them and listens to them, they feel that doctor has their best interests at heart and may be more likely to follow medical advice," says study leader Tabor E. Flickinger, M.D., M.P.H., a fellow in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
‘Ding-dong:’ A study finds specific neurons with an immune doorbell
A major advance in biology combines DNA and RNA and could revolutionize cancer treatments
Neutrophil elastase as a predictor of delivery in pregnant women with preterm labor
NIH to lead implementation of National Plan to End Parkinson’s Act
Growth of private equity and hospital consolidation in primary care and price implications
Online advertising of compounded glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists
Health care utilization and costs for older adults aging into Medicare after the affordable care act
Reading the genome and understanding evolution: Symbioses and gene transfer in leaf beetles
Brains of people with sickle cell disease appear older
Elena Belova and Yevgeny Raitses recognized for groundbreaking plasma physics research
SOX9 overexpression ameliorates metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis through activation of the AMPK pathway
Florescent probes illuminate cholesterol and Alzheimer’s research
Qigong significantly decreases chronic low back pain in US military veterans
New insights into pancreatic disease and diabetes
Effectiveness and safety of tenofovir amibufenamide in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B: A real-world, multicenter study
Higher costs limit attendance for life changing cardiac rehab
Over 500 patients receive diagnosis through genetic reanalysis
Brain changes in Huntington’s disease decades before diagnosis will guide future prevention trials
U of A astronomers capture unprecedented view of supermassive black hole in action
Astrophysicists reveal structure of 74 exocomet belts orbiting nearby stars in landmark survey
Textbooks need to be rewritten: RNA, not DNA, is the main cause of acute sunburn
Brits still associate working-class accents with criminal behavior – study warns of bias in the criminal justice system
What do you think ‘guilty’ sounds like? Scientists find accent stereotypes influence beliefs about who commits crimes
University of Calgary nursing study envisions child trauma treatment through a Marvel and DC lens
Research on performance optimization of virtual data space across WAN
Researchers reveal novel mechanism for intrinsic regulation of sugar cravings
Immunological face of megakaryocytes
Calorie labelling leads to modest reductions in selection and consumption
The effectiveness of intradialytic parenteral nutrition with ENEFLUID???? infusion
New study reveals AI’s transformative impact on ICU care with smarter predictions and transparent insights
[Press-News.org] New drug could help AMD sufferersUI pilot study has promising results for age-related macular degeneration