Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
Japan | Issued Patent | 7299889 | 06/20/2023 | 2017-162 |
United States Of America | Published Application | 20240124538 | 04/18/2024 | 2017-162 |
China | Published Application | CN 117379543 A | 01/12/2024 | 2017-162 |
China | Published Application | CN 117159463 A | 12/05/2023 | 2017-162 |
China | Published Application | CN 117159718 A | 12/05/2023 | 2017-162 |
Additional Patents Pending
A major risk factor for glaucoma which affects over 3 million Americans and 60 million people worldwide is increased intraocular pressure (IOP), which can damage the optic nerve and cause permanent blindness without treatment. Currently, there is no cure for glaucoma. Existing eye drops or oral medications are of limited efficacy with many side effects, and surgeries often fail with scar formation and fibrosis. Schlemm’s canal (SC) is a circumferential channel located at the iridocorneal angle in the ocular anterior chamber. It is part of the conventional aqueous humor outflow system, which accounts for 70–90% of the total aqueous humor that drains out of the eye in human. The endothelial cell lining of Schlemm’s canal is one of the primary sites of resistance to aqueous humor drainage and is a major determinant of IOP. When canal resistance increases with age or under pathological situation, IOP is elevated leading to glaucoma with irreversible optic nerve damage and vision loss. It is therefore an important target for glaucoma therapy.
UC researchers have discovered that Wnt5a is expressed on Schlemm’s canal, where its expression is regulated in response to sheer stress change, and devised a method for treating Glaucoma or pathogenic intraocular pressure by locally administering to an eye in need thereof formulations of a Wnt5a inhibitor.
Treatment of Glaucoma or intraocular pressure.
A dramatic improvement over current therapies.