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Home » Resources » Clinical Studies » Studies of Ocular Complications of AIDS (SOCA)--Ganciclovir-Cidofovir CMV Retinitis Trial (GCCRT)

Clinical Studies Supported by the NEI

Studies of Ocular Complications of AIDS (SOCA)--Ganciclovir-Cidofovir CMV Retinitis Trial (GCCRT)

Information About Other SOCA Studies. Purpose | Background | Description | Patient Eligibility | Patient Recruitment Status | Current Status of Study | Results | Publications | Clinical Centers | NEI Representative | Resource Centers

Purpose:

  • To compare the newest CMV retinitis drug, cidofovir, with a regimen of the ganciclovir intraocular device plus oral ganciclovir with respect to efficacy in preventing vision loss.
  • To compare a treatment regimen that incorporates highly active local therapy (ganciclovir device) with a treatment regimen that does not.

Background:

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is among the most frequently encountered opportunistic infections in patients with AIDS. In the era of prophylaxis for pneumocystic pneumonia, CMV disease is estimated to affect 45 percent of patients with AIDS sometime between the diagnosis of AIDS and death. Retinitis has been estimated to account for up to 85 percent of CMV disease in these patients, making CMV retinitis the most common ocular infection encountered. CMV retinitis is a relatively late-stage manifestation, associated with CD4+ T-cell counts < 100 cells/µL and often < 50 cells/µL.

All currently available treatments for CMV suppress viral replication but do not eliminate the virus from the body. Discontinuation of therapy is associated with a prompt relapse of the retinitis. Despite the use of chronic suppressive therapy, relapse of the retinitis generally occurs, at least with systemically administered anti-CMV drugs.

The first two treatments approved for CMV retinitis were intravenous ganciclovir and intravenous foscarnet. Both are given by daily intravenous infusions and therefore require central venous catheters. The development of newer treatments has focused not only on efficacious treatments, but also on treatments that do not require central venous catheters. Available treatments now include oral ganciclovir, the ganciclovir intraocular device, and intravenous cidofovir.

In vitro data suggest that combination therapies are synergistic in inhibiting viral replication; these therapies include a foscarnet-ganciclovir combination and a cidofovir-ganciclovir combination. In the SOCA--CMV Retinitis Retreatment Trial, the combination of intravenous ganciclovir and foscarnet was more effective than either drug alone for the treatment of relapsed retinitis. Therefore, the combination of intermittent intravenous cidofovir and daily oral ganciclovir may be an attractive therapy for relapsed disease because it may provide synergy for controlling both ocular and visceral disease while not necessitating either a central venous catheter or an intraocular surgical procedure.

Description:

The Ganciclovir-Cidofovir CMV Retinitis Trial (GCCRT) is a randomized, multicenter clinical trial. Patients will be assigned to receive one of two regimens: (1) ganciclovir intraocular device plus oral ganciclovir or (2) intravenous cidofovir. The intraocular device will be surgically implanted at baseline and again every 6 to 8 months in eyes with CMV retinitis. Oral ganciclovir is taken at a dose of 1 gram three times daily. Cidofovir will be administered intravenously at 5 mg/kg once weekly for 2 consecutive weeks and once every 2 weeks thereafter. If disease progression occurs in patients receiving cidofovir, patients will be given reinduction therapy, and oral ganciclovir at a dose of 1 gram three times per day will be added to the treatment. If patients assigned to cidofovir are unable to tolerate that regimen, an alternative systemic regimen will be recommended.

Study outcome variables include a decrease of three or more lines from baseline in best corrected visual acuity and rate of visual field loss. The study will also assess other variables including mortality, blood CMV and HIV load, quality of life, and medical costs.

Treatment assignment will not be masked to either patients or clinicians; however, reading of fundus photographs to determine both change in retinal involvement and progression will be masked.

Patient Eligibility:

Males and females age 13 years and older with diagnoses of AIDS and active CMV retinitis will be eligible. Patients must have a best corrected visual acuity of > 20/100 in at least one eye affected by CMV retinitis with at least one lesion 750 µ or greater that can be photographed.

Patient Recruitment Status:

No longer recruiting. Comments: Completed.

Current Status of Study:

Completed, with results not yet published. Comments: Completed.

Results:

None.

Publications

Dunn, JP, Van Natta M, Foster G, Kuppermann BD, Martin DF, Zong A, Jabs, DA for the Studies of Ocular Complications of AIDS Research Group:: Complications of ganciclovir implant surgery in patients with cytomegalovirus retinitis: The Ganciclovir Cidofovir Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Trial  Retina  24: 41-50, 2004  

The Studies of Ocular Complications of AIDS Research Group in collaboration with The AIDS Clinical Trials Group:: The ganciclovir implant plus oral ganciclovir versus parenteral cidofovir for the treatment of cytomegalovirus retinitis in patients with AIDS: The Ganciclovir Cidofovir Cytomegalovirus Retinitis Trial.  Am J Ophthalmol  131: 457-467, 2001  


Clinical Centers


California
Baruch D. Kuppermann, M.D., Ph.D.
Department of Ophthalmology
University of California, Irvine
118 Med Surge 1
Irvine, CA 92697-4375
USA
Telephone: (714) 824-6256

California
Fred Sattler, M.D.
LAC/USC Medical Center
5P21 Rand Schrader Clinic
1300 North Mission Road, Room 349
Los Angeles, CA 90033
USA
Telephone: (213) 343-8288

California
Gary N. Holland, M.D.
Jules Stein Eye Institute
University of California, Los Angeles
100 Stein Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90095-7003
USA
Telephone: (310) 206-7202

California
James O'Donnell, M.D.
Beckman Vision Center
University of California, San Francisco
Box 0730, Room K-301
10 Kirkham Street
San Francisco, CA 94143
USA
Telephone: (415) 476-1921

California
William R. Freeman, M.D.
Shiley Eye Center Center, 0946
University of California, San Diego
9415 Campus Point Dr.
La Jolla, CA 92037
USA
Telephone: (858) 822-3170

Florida
Janet Davis, M.D.
Bascom Palmer Eye Institute
University of Miami
900 N.W. 17th Street
Miami, FL 33136
USA
Telephone: (305) 326-6377

Florida
Peter R. Pavan, M.D.
University of South Florida
MDC Box 21
12901 Bruce B. Downs Boulevard
Tampa, FL 33612-4799
USA
Telephone: (813) 974-1530

Georgia
Daniel F. Martin, M.D.
The Emory Clinic
Emory University
1327 Clifton Road, N.E.
Atlanta, GA 30322
USA
Telephone: (404) 778-4815

Illinois
David V. Weinberg, M.D.
Department of Ophthalmology
Northwestern University
645 N. Michigan
Chicago, IL 60611
USA
Telephone: (312) 908-8152

Indiana
L. Joseph Wheat, M.D.
Division of Infectious Diseases
Indiana University, Indianapolis
1001 West Tenth Street, 430-OPW
Indianapolis, IN 46202-2879
USA
Telephone: (317) 630-6262

Louisiana
Bruce A. Barron, M.D.
LSU Eye Center
Louisiana State University Medical Center
2020 Gravier Street, Suite B
New Orleans, LA 70112
USA
Telephone: (504) 568-6700 x307

Maryland
James P. Dunn, M.D.
The Wilmer Eye Institute
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Maumenee 119
600 North Wolfe Street
Baltimore, MD 21287-9217
USA
Telephone: (410) 955-2966

Massachusetts
Martin Hirsch, M.D.
Harvard/BCH AIDS Clinical Trials Unit
Massachusetts General Hospital
Fruit Street
Boston, MA 02114
USA
Telephone: (617) 726-3815

New Jersey
Ronald Rescigno, M.D.
UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School
Department of Ophthalmology, DOC 6th floor
90 Bergen Street
Newark, NJ 07103-2499
USA
Telephone: (201) 982-2065

New York
Alan H. Friedman, M.D.
Department of Ophthalmology
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Box 1183
One Gustave L. Levy Place
New York, NY 10029-6574
USA
Telephone: (212) 241-6241

New York
Dorothy Friedberg, M.D.
Department of Ophthalmology
New York University Medical Center
318 Lexington Avenue
New York, NY 10016-6481
USA
Telephone: (212) 263-8473

New York
Murk-Hein Heinemann, M.D.
Department of Ophthalmology
New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center
525 East 68th Street
New York, NY 10021
USA
Telephone: (212) 746-2483

North Carolina
Charles van der Horst, M.D.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
CB 7030, 547 Burnett-Womack Building
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7030
USA
Telephone: (919) 966-2536

Texas
Richard Alan Lewis, M.D., M.S.
Cullen Eye Institute, NC-206
Baylor College of Medicine
One Baylor Plaza
Houston, TX 77030
USA
Telephone: (713) 798-5969

NEI Representative



Natalie Kurinij, Ph.D.
National Eye Institute
National Institutes of Health
5635 Fishers Lane
Suite 1300, MSC 9300
Bethesda, MD 20892-9300
USA
Telephone: (301) 496-2020
Fax: (301) 402-0528

Resource Centers


Chairman's Office
Douglas A. Jabs, M.D., M.B.A.
The Wilmer Eye Institute
Department of Ophthalmology
The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
550 North Broadway, Suite 700
Baltimore, MD 21205
USA
Telephone: (410) 955-1966

Coordinating Center
Curtis L. Meinert, Ph.D.
Department of Epidemiology
Bloomberg School of Public Health
The Johns Hopkins University
615 North Wolfe Street, Room 5010
Baltimore, MD 21205
USA
Telephone: (410) 955-8198

Fundus Photograph Reading Center
Maatthew D. Davis, M.D.
Department of Ophthalmology
University of Wisconsin
Park West One
406 Science Dr., Suite 400
Madison, WI 53711-1068
USA
Telephone: (608) 263-6071

SOCA Website

Last Updated: 3/15/2006

 

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