thymosin-beta(4) has been researched along with Graft-vs-Host-Disease* in 1 studies
1 trial(s) available for thymosin-beta(4) and Graft-vs-Host-Disease
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Thymosin β4 significantly improves signs and symptoms of severe dry eye in a phase 2 randomized trial.
Standard therapies for severe dry eye are limited and fail to resolve the problem. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Thymosin β4 eye drops (RGN-259) as a novel therapy for severe dry eye disease (including that associated with graft vs. host disease).. A small, multicenter, randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled 56-day phase 2 clinical trial including a 28-day follow-up at 2 US sites. Nine patients with severe dry eye were treated with either RGN-259 (0.1%) or vehicle control 6 times daily over a period of 28 days. Dry eye sign and symptom assessments, such as ocular discomfort (using the OSDI questionnaire) and corneal fluorescein staining (using the NEI workshop grading system), were evaluated at various time points.. Statistically significant differences in both symptom and sign assessments, were seen at various time points throughout the study. Of particular note at day 56, the RGN-259-treated group (12 eyes) had 35.1% reduction of ocular discomfort compared with vehicle control (6 eyes) (P = 0.0141), and 59.1% reduction of total corneal fluorescein staining compared with vehicle control (P = 0.0108). Other improvements seen in the RGN-259-treated patients included tear film breakup time and increased tear volume production.. In this small trial, RGN-259 eye drops were safe and well tolerated and met key efficacy objectives with statistically significant symptom and sign improvements, compared with vehicle control, at various time intervals, including 28-days posttreatment. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION--URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01393132. Topics: Adult; Aged; Cornea; Double-Blind Method; Dry Eye Syndromes; Female; Fluorescein; Fluorescent Dyes; Fluorophotometry; Follow-Up Studies; Graft vs Host Disease; Humans; Male; Microfilament Proteins; Middle Aged; Ophthalmic Solutions; Surveys and Questionnaires; Tears; Thymosin | 2015 |