PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to investigate the effect of orally administered ruboxistaurin (RBX, LY333531), a selective protein kinase C beta inhibitor, on the permeability of the blood-retinal barrier in patients with diabetic macular edema. METHODS:Forty-one patients with diabetic macular edema were randomly assigned to an 18-month randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked trial including four study arms (4, 16, or 32 mg/d RBX, or placebo). The RBX group comprised 30 patients (42 eyes) and the placebo group 11 patients (13 eyes). Retinal vascular leakage was assessed using vitreous fluorometry at baseline and after 3, 12, and 18 months. Statistical analysis of the effect of treatment accounted for repeated measurements and tested potential interaction with baseline permeability, HbA(1c), and arterial blood pressure. RESULTS: Statistical analysis and modeling demonstrated a significant interaction between RBX treatment at any dosage and baseline permeability (P = 0.032, mixed models). A threefold or higher increase in retinal vascular leakage at baseline was associated with a significant reduction (30%) in retinal vascular leakage after RBX treatment compared with placebo. Visual acuity was normal at baseline and remained unchanged throughout the study. CONCLUSIONS:RBX treatment was associated with a reduction of retinal vascular leakage in eyes that had diabetic macular edema and markedly elevated leakage at baseline. These data suggest that clinical benefit from RBX treatment may be most prominent in patients with severe macular edema at baseline, and trials investigating this therapy may benefit from stratification according to baseline leakage.
RCT Entities:
PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to investigate the effect of orally administered ruboxistaurin (RBX, LY333531), a selective protein kinase C beta inhibitor, on the permeability of the blood-retinal barrier in patients with diabetic macular edema. METHODS: Forty-one patients with diabetic macular edema were randomly assigned to an 18-month randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked trial including four study arms (4, 16, or 32 mg/d RBX, or placebo). The RBX group comprised 30 patients (42 eyes) and the placebo group 11 patients (13 eyes). Retinal vascular leakage was assessed using vitreous fluorometry at baseline and after 3, 12, and 18 months. Statistical analysis of the effect of treatment accounted for repeated measurements and tested potential interaction with baseline permeability, HbA(1c), and arterial blood pressure. RESULTS: Statistical analysis and modeling demonstrated a significant interaction between RBX treatment at any dosage and baseline permeability (P = 0.032, mixed models). A threefold or higher increase in retinal vascular leakage at baseline was associated with a significant reduction (30%) in retinal vascular leakage after RBX treatment compared with placebo. Visual acuity was normal at baseline and remained unchanged throughout the study. CONCLUSIONS:RBX treatment was associated with a reduction of retinal vascular leakage in eyes that had diabetic macular edema and markedly elevated leakage at baseline. These data suggest that clinical benefit from RBX treatment may be most prominent in patients with severe macular edema at baseline, and trials investigating this therapy may benefit from stratification according to baseline leakage.
Authors: J Fernando Arevalo; Juan G Sanchez; Jans Fromow-Guerra; Lihteh Wu; Maria H Berrocal; Michel E Farah; Jose Cardillo; Francisco J Rodríguez Journal: Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol Date: 2009-02-03 Impact factor: 3.117
Authors: Chieh Allen Lee; Guangyuan Li; Mansi D Patel; J Mark Petrash; Beth Ann Benetz; Alex Veenstra; Jaume Amengual; Johannes von Lintig; Christopher J Burant; Johnny Tang; Timothy S Kern Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci Date: 2014-05-02 Impact factor: 4.799
Authors: J Fernando Arevalo; Juan G Sanchez; Andres F Lasave; Lihteh Wu; Mauricio Maia; Sergio Bonafonte; Miguel Brito; Arturo A Alezzandrini; Natalia Restrepo; Maria H Berrocal; Mario Saravia; Michel Eid Farah; Jans Fromow-Guerra; Virgilio Morales-Canton Journal: J Ophthalmol Date: 2011-03-30 Impact factor: 1.909