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RECRUITING
NCT06985706
PHASE3

Anti-vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (Anti-VEGF) Monotherapy vs Anti-VEGF Followed by Subthreshold Micropulse Laser for Treating Severe Diabetic Macular Oedema When the Central Retina Goes <400 Microns

Sponsor: Belfast Health and Social Care Trust

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The macula is the centre of the retina; it gives central sight, colour and fine detail. People with diabetes may develop diabetic macular oedema (DMO). In DMO, fluid leaks from blood vessels and builds up at the macula, causing sight loss. DMO can be mild or severe; this is determined by measuring, in microns (µm), how thick the macula is. One µm is one-thousandth of a millimetre. People presenting with mild DMO (macula less than 400 µm thick; normally it is around 250 µm but varies with sex and ethnicity) are offered macular laser treatment. Laser works well for these patients. Subthreshold micropulse laser (SML), which does not damage the macula, works as well as standard laser, which produces a burn, and is cost-effective. However, many people present with severe DMO (macula 400 µm or thicker) where the laser does not work well. The standard treatment is eye injections of anti-VEGFs. VEGF stands for vascular endothelial growth factor. VEGF is high in eyes with DMO and causes blood vessel leakage. Anti-VEGFs block VEGF. They are given monthly to begin with, then every 2-3 months for months or years until DMO clears. In many patients DMO comes back after clearing and anti-VEGFs need to be re-started most often monthly initially again. To improve the care of people with severe DMO this study will compare the current standard care (anti-VEGFs alone) with a strategy in which patients begin with an anti-VEGF but switch to SML once the macula is less than 400 µm thick. Patients aged over 18 years with type 1 or type 2 diabetes and severe DMO can participate. They are randomly allocated either anti-VEGFs alone or anti-VEGFs then SML when the macula is less than 400 µm thick.

Official title: Treatment of Severe Diabetic Macular Oedema With Anti-vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (Anti-VEGF) Monotherapy vs Anti-VEGF Followed by Subthreshold Micropulse Laser When the Thickness of the Central Retina Goes Below 400 Microns: Pragmatic Randomised Equivalence Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

264

Start Date

2025-05-19

Completion Date

2028-11-30

Last Updated

2025-09-19

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Subthreshold Micropulse Laser (SML)

SML will be applied in line with the DAME Guideline and follow the DAME participant pathway.

DRUG

Anti-VEGF Monotherapy (standard care)

Anti-VEGFs including ranibizumab and biosimilars, aflibercept, faricimab, and brolucizumab will be used, as per the standard of care at participating sites. The anti-VEGF should be administered in line with the summary of product characteristics (SmPC).

Locations (22)

The Royal Hospitals Belfast

Belfast, United Kingdom

Birmingham and Midland Eye Centre

Birmingham, United Kingdom

Sussex Eye Hospital

Brighton, United Kingdom

Bristol Eye Hospital

Bristol, United Kingdom

Frimley Park Hospital

Camberley, United Kingdom

Gloucestershire Royal Hospital

Gloucester, United Kingdom

Hull Royal Infirmary

Hull, United Kingdom

Hinchingbrooke Hospital

Huntingdon, United Kingdom

Royal Liverpool University Hospital

Liverpool, United Kingdom

Central Middlesex Hospital

London, United Kingdom

Chelsea and Westminster Hospital

London, United Kingdom

Kings College Hospital

London, United Kingdom

Moorfields Eye Hospital

London, United Kingdom

James Cook Hospital

Middlesbrough, United Kingdom

Royal Gwent Hospital

Newport, United Kingdom

Queen's Medical Centre

Nottingham, United Kingdom

East Surrey Hospital

Redhill, United Kingdom

University Hospital Southampton

Southampton, United Kingdom

Sunderland Eye Hospital

Sunderland, United Kingdom

Singleton Hospital

Swansea, United Kingdom

Torbay Hospital

Torquay, United Kingdom

Hillingdon Hospital

Uxbridge, United Kingdom