Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Vision loss in developed nations due to age-related macular degeneration (AMD)
continues to reach epidemic proportions in the 21st century. Around the turn of the millennium,
the disease was already estimated to affect between 30 and 50 million people worldwide.
Currently, it is the leading cause of irreversible blindness on three continents and imparts a
massive toll on the health-care system. In the United States, it is likely that future expenses will
maintain steady, if not exponential, growth in the face of an aging baby boomer generation and
limited financial resources. Severe vision loss from AMD results from choroidal
neovascularization (CNV), the invasion of the retina by abnormal choroidal blood vessels, or
from geographic atrophy (GA), the apoptotic loss of retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE),
photoreceptors and choriocapillaris. Significant advances in the molecular understanding of
CNV pathogenesis have led to an FDA-approved vision-improving therapy [1, 2]. In contrast, GA
pathogenesis is still nebulous and there are no FDA-approved therapies for the 1 million people
in the United States who already have GA and the millions more who are at risk. This proposal
aims to provide an enriched training environment for the candidate to gain expertise in
next generation biomedical technologies, to advance and translate scientific
investigations into recently discovered molecular pathways in non-exudative AMD or GA
pathogenesis, and to initiate a Phase I clinical trial with a novel medical therapy to arrest
the progression of this blinding disease.
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 7/1/11 → 6/30/13 |
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