Clinical Trial: New Cysteamine Eye Drops Formulation to Treat Corneal Crystals in Cystinosis

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: Safety and Efficacy Trial of a Proposed NDA Formulation of Topical Cysteamine in the Treatment of Corneal Cystine Crystal Accumulation in Cystinosis

Brief Summary:

This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of a new formulation of eye drops used to treat cystine crystals that form in the corneas of patients with cystinosis. Cystinosis is an inherited disease caused by a defective enzyme, in which excessive amounts of the amino acid cystine accumulate in the body. Among others, symptoms include poor growth and development of kidney failure. In addition, after 10 to 20 years, the cornea-the outside covering of the eye over the iris and pupils-becomes so packed with cystine crystals that small, painful breaks may develop.

This corneal condition is treated with cysteamine eye drops. This study is designed to provide additional information about this medication that the Food and Drug Administration requires before approving it for marketing. The study will examine, in two separate but simultaneous investigations, the safety and effectiveness of a new cysteamine formulation. In both studies, before treatment begins, patients will have a complete eye examination, and photographs of the eye will be taken using a bright flash.

Safety Study

Children and adults currently enrolled in a cystinosis study at the National Institutes of Health may participate in this trial. They will receive the current cysteamine formulation in one eye and the new preparation in the other eye. The drops will be given every hour during waking hours. Patients will be observed daily for the first week of treatment and will be called at 2 weeks and 4 weeks to check on side effects, if any. At 6 months, they will undergo a repeat eye examination. Patients (or their parents) will keep a daily diary recording the condition of each eye.

Effectiveness Study

Children

Detailed Summary:

The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a new formulation of cysteamine eye drops to treat children and adults with cystinosis and cystine crystal accumulation in the cornea. The safety of this new formulation will be evaluated among 30 children and adults with a history of cystinosis under treatment at the NIH with the current preparation of cysteamine eye drops. Patients will be randomized to the current preparation in one eye and the new formulation in the other eye. Vision, blurring, redness, pain, irritation, and itching will be evaluated in each eye at Week 1, Week 2, Week 4, and Month 6. Complete ophthalmic evaluation including corneal slit lamp examination with photographs will be performed at baseline and 6 months at the NEI Clinical Center.

Efficacy will be evaluated among 15 patients (5 each from the NEI Clinical Center, Ann Arbor Michigan, and La Jolla, California) who have not received cysteamine eye drops prior to enrollment. Patients will be randomized to the current preparation in one eye and the new formulation in the other eye. Vision, blurring, redness, pain, irritation, and itching will be evaluated in each eye and a complete ophthalmic assessment including a corneal slit lamp examination with photographs will be performed at baseline, Month 3, Month 6, Month 9, and Month 12. The primary efficacy outcome measure will be the improvement in the new formulation treated eye by 1.00 unit on a corneal photograph scale from 0.00 to 3.00 in 0.25 increments compared to the baseline grade. This scale grades the density and number of crystals in the cornea. The safety and efficacy studies will be conducted concurrently.


Sponsor: National Eye Institute (NEI)

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Information By: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)

Dates:
Date Received: November 3, 1999
Date Started: May 1998
Date Completion: March 2001
Last Updated: March 3, 2008
Last Verified: April 2000