Literature DB >> 27051270

Ocriplasmin: who is the best candidate?

Claudia M Prospero Ponce1, William Stevenson1, Rachel Gelman1, Daniel R Agarwal1, John B Christoforidis1.   

Abstract

Enzymatic vitreolysis is currently the focus of attention around the world for treating vitreomacular traction and full-thickness macular hole. Induction of posterior vitreous detachment is an active area of developmental clinical and basic research. Despite exerting an incompletely elucidated physiological effect, ocriplasmin (also known as microplasmin) has been recognized to serve as a well-tolerated intravitreal injection for the treatment of vitreomacular traction and full-thickness macular hole. There are several unexplored areas of intervention where enzymatic vitreolysis could potentially be used (ie, diabetic macular edema). Recent promising studies have included combinations of enzymatic approaches and new synthetic molecules that induce complete posterior vitreous detachment as well as antiangiogenesis. Although no guidelines have been proposed for the use of ocriplasmin, this review attempts to aid physicians in answering the most important question, "Who is the best candidate?"

Entities:  

Keywords:  diabetic macular edema; enzymatic vitreolysis; future management; macular hole; ocriplasmin-best candidate; vitreomacular traction

Year:  2016        PMID: 27051270      PMCID: PMC4803238          DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S97947

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1177-5467


Introduction

There are a variety of disorders of the vitreoretinal interface. Over the past 10 years, special attention has been paid to vitreomacular traction (VMT), the treatment and management of which have been constantly modified following the increasing understanding of the vitreous’ molecular and anatomical behaviours at the vitreoretinal interface. In this review, we intend to guide the reader through the beginnings of enzymatic vitreolysis, as well as controversies and recent discoveries related to ocriplasmin, with a review of the anatomy for further understanding of this review.

Vitreous anatomy and molecular structure

The vitreous humor is composed of mostly water (~98%).1,2 The framework that supports the vitreous humor is made of collagen II, IV, V/XI, VI, and IX fibrils,1,3 as well as hyaluronic acid (hyaloid meaning glassy), which is negatively charged and hydrophilic. Hyaluronic acid is embedded in between the “scaffold-like” configuration of the collagen fibrils, thus building up the structure.4 At birth, the vitreous humor is attached only at the ora serrata; later, it migrates to form an annular ring straddling the ora.5 The vitreous humor expands to the remaining portions of the retina aided by production of new collagen by retinal cells. This collagen either breaks into the inner limiting membrane (ILM) to attach to the cortical vitreous collagen or remains in the cellular zone of the ILM.5 The outer vitreous is called the vitreous cortex and is very different from the inner vitreous. The vitreous cortex is mainly composed of types II, IX, and V/XI hybrid collagen. Although the vitreous cortex runs along the ILM, these structures differ significantly in composition. The ILM is mainly composed of collagen IV and is derived from the same embryologic component as Bruch’s membrane.4,6 The vitreous is divided into anterior cortex and posterior cortex. The anterior attachment of the vitreous is firm (vitreous base and ora serrata) while the attachment of the posterior vitreous, both to the optic nerve (ON) and to the macula, is weaker.2 Strong zones of attachment are found in places where the ILM is thin, eg, in lattice degeneration, retinal tufts, enclosed ora bays, following retinal vessels, and foveola.4,7,8 This may explain why after an incomplete posterior vitreous detachment (PVD), the tractional effect is generally persistent in zones of ≤500 μm of vitreofoveolar adhesion.8,9 The presence of liquefaction without dehiscence of the vitreous, “anomalous PVD”, may predispose to persistent attachment of vitreous, causing vitreoschisis, a phenomenon that splits the posterior vitreous cortex and provides several types of traction (centripetal, centrifugal, and tangential).4,7 It is precisely this minimal zone of traction that is related to lamellar, micro, or full-thickness macular holes (FTMH).8 With time, the vitreous loses its firmness in a process known as age-related liquefaction.1 Several molecular and histopathological approaches have been undertaken to further explain this phenomenon. For instance, it has been shown that adults at the age of 40 years predominantly have liquid vitreous vs gel vitreous, in comparison to children, who have only 20% of vitreous in the form of liquid.1,10 This liquefactive change is believed to be secondary to an uneven collapse of collagen fibrils mainly in the central vitreous.11 One of the most studied processes is that of progressive degeneration of collagen IX. The half-life for collagen IX is 11 years, and it has been proven that the loss of these fibrils with time allows other collagen fibrils, such as collagen II that has a high fusion power,1 to aggregate, changing the vitreous anatomy. Innovative methods of visualizing the vitreous include diffusion-weighted imaging – a form of magnetic resonance imaging – which can be used to track the movement of water protons. Meral and Birgili12 demonstrated that diffusion tends to increase with age, due to a decrease in cellularity and an increase in potential spaces in which water molecules can move. As part of the aging process, PVD may occur. PVD refers to detachment of the posterior vitreous, which occurs in >27% of people with increased age and in up to 60% of patients >60 years of age.13,14 Both vitreous liquefaction and vitreoretinal attachment weakening are present in PVD. As already mentioned, PVD may be complete or incomplete. In a complete detachment, there is no residual adherence to the ON or retina, and the posterior vitreous simply moves forward to occupy the center of the vitreous cavity.1,14 Because there is no remaining vitreous contact with the retina, PVD has been shown to protect against some vitreoretinal pathologies, such as proliferative diabetic retinopathy.15

VMT syndrome

When vitreous development is abnormal, it leads to vitreoretinal pathologies that may affect patients’ vision negatively. Approximately 3 decades ago, ophthalmologists were able to clinically identify three similar vitreoretinal disease conditions16: epiretinal membrane (ERM), idiopathic macular hole, and impending macular hole.15,16 These conditions were clinically described and classified by Gass in 1988,17 but only after the application of optical coherence tomography (OCT) did the classification become more objective. Even with a clear slit-lamp view, fluid-filled pockets can sometimes be misinterpreted as “complete detachment”.18 Macular pucker, macular hole (lamellar, full-thickness), and VMT share a common etiology in PVD with persistent vitreomacular adhesion (VMA).4 Macular pucker can occur when traction is directed inward, and macular hole can occur when traction is directed outward.6,19 Idiopathic macular pucker has been described as a “nonvascularized ERM covering and/or distorting macula” without any history of surgery, lattice degeneration, or inflammation.20,21 Impending macular hole is described as a yellowish deep ring in the macula related to mild visual loss.17,22 Smiddy et al20 studied vitreomacular diseases and their histopathology. All idiopathic macular pucker cases (n=101) were found to exhibit previous PVD, although these PVDs were not further specified as being complete or incomplete. Histologically, the predominant cell type in macular pucker was the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cell, with some cases involving astrocytes and fibrocytes. Additionally, all of the VMT cases involved a partial PVD with persistent attachment to the macula and ON, with histology showing fibrous astrocytes to be the predominant cell type. In the case of impending macular hole, collagen fibrils were predominant in all cases, with some tissues involving fibrous astrocytes, lymphocytes, or macrophages.20 More recently, Schumann et al23 retrieved ILM specimens from patients who had vitrectomies with or without prior ocriplasmin injection. Immunohistochemistry revealed that the predominant cells in FMTH and VMT were glial cells and myofibroblasts, respectively. Incomplete PVD may appear if liquefaction and dehiscence are not balanced, causing vitreopapillary traction as well as optic disk and retinal neovascularization.4 VMT often extends to up to three disk diameters in the posterior retina24,25 and can therefore affect vision outcomes. Symptomatic VMT clinically presents as metamorphopsia, micropsia, photopsia, or decreased vision26,27 and is seen as a peripheral separation with full-thickness attachment of the vitreous cortex, which applies traction on the macula in an oblique or axial force. A V-shaped pattern of incomplete PVD may have a better visual acuity (VA) prognosis when compared to a J-shaped pattern.27–29 Interestingly, similar abnormal retinal traction is seen in collagen deficiency syndromes (Stickler, Ehlers–Danlos, and Marfan syndromes) wherein there is predominant liquefaction, persistent retinal attachment, and resulting retinal detachment and/or tears.30,31 According to the International Vitreomacular Traction Study Group,32 VMT is characterized by anomalous PVD with distortion of the fovea, including but not limited to the following: subretinal fluid (SRF) collection, pseudocysts, cystoid macular edema, and schisis. Classification is shown in Table 1.
Table 1

IVTS study classification

VMAVMTFull-thickness macular hole
Size
Focal (≤1,500 μm) or broad (>1,500 μm)Focal (≤1,500 μm) or broad (>1,500 μm)Small (≤250 μm)Medium (>250–≤400 μm)Large (>400 μm)
Characteristic
Isolated* or concurrentIsolated or concurrentStatus of vitreous: with or without VMT Cause: primary or secondary

Note:

Without other associated macular abnormalities.

Abbreviations: IVTS, International Vitreomacular Traction Study group; VMA, vitreomacular adhesion; VMT, vitreomacular traction.

Although some patients may develop spontaneous complete PVD with improvement of foveal structure and VA,33 most of the patients do not show resolution of symptoms without intervention.

Surgery and vitreoretinal interface

Vitrectomy has been a promising solution for VMA, including macular pucker and hole, as well as VMT. Vitrectomy was initially used for ERM removal with VA improvement in ~80% of patients.20,21,34,35 Cataract and ERM formation limited the VA outcome.36 Surgical management of macular pucker includes peripheral and central core vitrectomy with ILM membrane removal to prevent recurrence.37 Although there are no true guidelines for surgical intervention, indications for surgery include photoreceptor damage demonstrated on OCT, metamorphopsia, or progressive vision loss. The normal structure of photoreceptor is assessed using OCT by looking at the boundary between the inner and outer segments, which some have defined as the ellipsoid zone,37 and the interdigitation zone, which is the communication area between inner segments and RPE.37–43 Intact layer of photoreceptors, good baseline VA, and short-term symptoms are prognostic factors for good surgery outcomes.18,37 However, surgery may change the retinal anatomy even when there is evidence of normal anatomy prior to surgery. Interestingly, foveal architecture is less correlated with good VA because previous data have demonstrated that vision recovery after surgery may occur despite an abnormal foveal contour. Similar indications are used to guide intervention for pseudoholes and macular holes, and intervention is often combined with a mechanical type of repositioning of the retinal layers, such as gas tamponade.37 For macular holes, the main indicator of prognosis is the base diameter. A measurement of <500 μm is an indicator of high success rate,44,45 with ILM removal usually indicated for better outcome.45 An exception is lamellar macular hole, because visual deterioration was found to be related to the amount of VMT, macular edema, hole base diameter, and – possibly – decreased foveal thickness.6,19,46,47 It is debatable if mechanical gas tamponade is useful as a treatment for VMT. However, recent reports showed promising results using expansile sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) gas injection for the treatment of symptomatic VMT syndrome. Day et al48 reported VMT release in five patients and resolution of macular hole in two patients after injection of 0.3 mL of 100% SF6 gas. Rodrigues et al reported that intravitreal injection of expansile perfluoropropane (C3F8) for the treatment of VMT achieved 40% release rate 1 month after injection (five out of seven patients).49 VMT surgery, on the other hand, has a more well-defined indication. Per Figueroa and Contreras,37 surgery should be performed not only if metamorphopsia is present, but also when patients have VA ≤20/40. Additionally, when retinal traction is present, it can evolve either to a lamellar macular hole or FTMH,29,32 or to other sight-threatening complications such as diabetic retinopathy (DR),15 macular edema and cystic changes,20,24,50,51 macular detachment,52 retinal vein occlusion,51,53–55 and even age-related macular degeneration (AMD).55–58 Therefore, when present on OCT, retinal traction should be relieved by the surgical or enzymatic approach.

Enzymatic vitreolysis

During the past 2 decades, induction of PVD has been attempted with the use of molecular (enzymatic) rather than mechanical (surgical) means. Enzymatic vitreolysis has several advantages over surgical intervention because the former is 1) broader, reaching both the posterior pole and the periphery, 2) less traumatic for the macula and the eye in general, 3) prophylactic in retinal pathologies that include fibrocellular or fibrovascular proliferation (except for proliferative vitreoretinopathy where RPE cells proliferate), 4) protective against retinal hypoxia,59–64 ERM formation,36 and nerve fiber layer defects occasionally seen after ILM surgery,62 and 5) with less cataract formation.62

First enzymatic agents

The effectiveness of pharmacologic vitreolysis is directly related to the successful balance between liquefaction and dehiscence.4 Pharmacologic agents previously used for this purpose included hyaluronidase, chondroitinase, dispase, collagenase, plasmin, tissue plasmininogen activator (tPA), and microplasmin/ocriplasmin,4,54 among others. Hyaluronidase has been used as an enzymatic agent to induce vitreolysis.4,65 It has been found to be dose dependent and effective in the eyes of rabbits,65,66 rats,67 pigs,68 cows,69 and humans.65,70 Even when liquefaction was the consistently found main effect, it was primarily aimed for vitreous hemorrhage management.70 Chondroitinase has been used for vitreolysis in some animal models such as pigs,71 bovines,69 and primates,72 with no significant effect. Chondroitinase has shown some vitreous fiber detachment only in some human cadaver eyes.72 To date, this has not been investigated any further. Dispase is an enzyme that acts against collagen, mainly type IV.73 Dispase has been also applied to human and pig eyes to induce vitreolysis, and although it is somewhat effective, it has been shown to cause retinal toxicity.74 Urokinase has been used in a rabbit model along with SF6 to induce vitreolysis and has been effective in 75% of the eyes,75 but it has not been used as a single agent. Urokinase shows no retinal toxicity in rabbit eyes.76 Bacterial collagenase activity has been shown to produce effective vitreolysis in a different set of animal models77,78 and to reduce the molecular weight of collagen.79 In a pilot human study,80 it has been suggested to be an aid in the removal of fibrotic membranes in some patients intraoperatively; however, the results do not have statistical significance and are inconsistent. In a subsequent study,81 collagenase activity in the vitreous has been widely proven to be toxic to the retina. Intravitreal tPA, which converts plasminogen into plasmin in vivo, has been effective in facilitating vitrectomy when given prior to surgery and after cryopexy,82,83 as well as inducing PVD even without vitrectomy.84,85 However, variable effects have been reported because they depend on the amount of endogenous plasminogen present in the vitreous.54,83 It has been hypothesized that plasminogen is increased in conditions where the blood retinal barrier has been violated, such as after cryopexy,83 DR,86 retinal vein occlusion,85 etc. Retinal toxicity has also been reported.87–89 Plasmin is a 88 kDa molecule62,90 that has been used to induce vitreous dehiscence, for PVD induction (as an adjuvant to vitreoretinal surgery), and for macular hole treatment in pediatric and adult patients,91–95 as well as in animals.90,96,97 In order to be injected in the vitreous cavity, the plasmin has to be processed from autologous blood: the hazard involved in processing autologous plasmin is greater than the actual benefit derived.90,94,98–101 The effect of plasmin on PVD is dependent on time, also demonstrating transient retinal damage as noted by electroretinography (ERG).90,97

Current enzymatic agents

Ocriplasmin

In response to the challenge of obtaining autologous plasmin, ocriplasmin (formerly called microplasmin) was created. Ocriplasmin (Jetrea; ThromboGenics NV, Leuven, Belgium) is a recombinant protein created by the Pichia pastoris expression system, with intrinsic action on collagen, fibronectin, and laminin.1,3 It is a small 27 kDa protein that cleaves plasmin and has been shown to cause both vitreous liquefaction and PVD.62,63,102–104 Gandorfer et al105 studied the efficacy of ocriplasmin in cadaver human eyes and live cats. They studied the morphology of both groups along with a control group treated with saline solution. Complete PVD was found in all human eyes that received 125 μg and in cat eyes that received 25 μg intravitreally. In all cases, ILM was normal after injection.105 Human studies started ~1 decade ago. Initially, ocriplasmin was used to induce PVD and resolve VMT. VMT resolution has been reported in at least 50% of patients.106,107 The Microplasmin for intravitreal injection (MIVI) trial I108 studied the adequate dose needed to induce PVD prior to vitrectomy and concluded that 125 μg was generally effective MIVI IIT studied the resolution of VMT after a single vs repeated ocriplasmin injections. Successful resolution of VMT was seen in 58% of patients after repeated doses of ocriplasmin 125 μg up to 28 days from the previous injection.109 The MIVI TRUST group110 studied the dose-related response to ocriplasmin vs placebo in 652 eyes and found that ocriplasmin 125 μg was overall more effective than placebo in the treatment of symptomatic VMT syndrome (26.5% vs 10.1%). Total PVD and VA improvement was noted in more ocriplasmin- than placebo (saline)-injected eyes after 28 days of injection. Release of VMT may be present even after 1 year of initial treatment.111,112 VA generally improves after VMT resolution, except for some reported exceptions.113,114 The resolution of VMA was seen mainly in the central 6 mm of the macula when assessed with OCT imaging. Both groups had adverse effects after the intravitreal injection, which improved later.115 Ocriplasmin was then applied for nonsurgical closure of macular hole. Initial results reported macular hole resolution as variable.106 Patients treated with ocriplasmin in the MIVI TRUST study110 had more resolution of macular hole when compared to placebo (13.4% vs 3.7%). Other studies had confirmed effective small and medium FTMH closure116 with ocriplasmin (40.6% ocriplasmin vs 10.6% control),117 and the closure of FTMH has been reported despite incomplete release of VMT118 and months after ocriplasmin injection.111 In addition to VMA resolution, foveal thickness also decreases after ocriplasmin injection. In a study of 21 patients, the average foveal thickness measured by spectral-domain OCT decreased ~80 μm after 4 months of injection and remained stable106 Haller et al110 studied the effect of ocriplasmin on VA in a subgroup of patients in the MIVI study, assessing whether specific end point results continued for 6 months after the initial trial. The end points were age of response, subset population with better response, etc. The analysis showed that the best outcome from start through 6 months was found in patients younger than 65 years of age and with absence of ERM, occurrence of phakic eyes, VMT <1,500 μm in diameter, and presence of FTMH of <250 μm diameter. The latter group was more likely to achieve full closure in 6 months than with FTMH >400 μm diameter (58.3% vs 26%) (Table 2). Although patients were followed for 6 months, the effect in younger patients is unpredictable.119 Recent work120 has suggested that phakic, young females with specific OCT characteristics (small area of adhesion, V-shaped VMT with wide angles, etc) were more likely to have VMT release after ocriplasmin.
Table 2

Proposed indication for ocriplasmin

Best candidates for ocriplasmin injection
1Phakic eyes
2Age ≤65 years
3No previous surgeries
4No diabetic retinopathy
5No ERM
6VMA <1,500 μm
7No macular pucker
8FTMH <250 μm
Relative Indications:
FTMH >250 μm but <400 μm
Females
Specific OCT characteristics (small area of adhesion,“V-shaped” VMT with wide angles)

Abbreviations: ERM, epiretinal membrane; FTMH, full-thickness macular hole; OCT, optical coherence tomography; VMA, vitreomacular adhesion; VMT, vitreo-macular traction.

Was the “anatomic” resolution of the above clinically significant for the patients? The answer to this question was first addressed by the MIVI TRUST study.110 On average, patients spent 10 minutes answering a visual function questionnaire (VFQ-25) designed by The National Eye Institute,110,121,122 which assessed global vision rating, difficulty with near and far vision, limitations in social functioning due to vision – including dependence on others due to low vision, driving difficulties, etc. In general, patients who received ocriplasmin had improvement in best-corrected VA and quality of life.

Contraindications

Relative contraindications for ocriplasmin use include previous vitrectomy, laser/surgery 3 months earlier, intravitreal injection within 6 months, fibrocellular proliferation at the level of the ILM (including proliferative vitreoretinopathy) and ERM,112 history of rhegmatogenous detachment, myopia >5 D (diopters), proliferative vitreoretinopathy, FTMH >400 μm, and severe peripheral retinal degeneration. In the MIVI study,108,109 patients with DR, glaucoma, uncontrolled systemic hypertension, ocular inflammation, or trauma were excluded from ocriplasmin injection. Currently, ocriplasmin is being applied in patients even with normal VA at baseline.

Complications

Some of the reported adverse effects of ocriplasmin are transient decrease in VA, which generally improves after injection, photopsias (sparkles, flashes, lines), pupillary abnormalities/impaired reflex,123 zonular dehiscence,124 and lens subluxation.125–127 Willekens et al104 observed a change in the cup-to-disk ratio in patients after ocriplasmin injection. There was a decrease in the cup-to-disk ratio in those with persistent VMT after injection. However, mean retinal nerve fiber layer thickness was higher in all patients regardless of injection. This may be of clinical importance in patients who are being monitored for glaucoma. This anatomical change in the ON was statistically significant; however, the power of this study was low.104 One case of sterile endophthalmitis presumed to be caused by ocriplasmin injection was found in the literature.128 A 67-year-old gentleman presented with symptoms of acute endophthalmitis within 24 hours after ocriplasmin injection; he was treated with topical steroids and cycloplegics, improving most of his symptoms. There was no tap and inject; therefore, no culture was performed. Retinal toxicity after ocriplasmin injection has variable manifestations.129 Reported structural changes include vascular constriction,130 ellipsoid layer abnormalities (thinning, disruption, irregularity),107,123,130–136 decreased reflectivity that persisted for 2 months after treatment,137 abnormal autofluorescence,106,126,127,138 SRF collection,106,107,139,140 temporary separation of retina from RPE,138 macular hole enlargement,23,130 and macular detachment.129 Interestingly, central serous chorioretinopathy, a type of SRF collection, has been noted up to 17 months after injection of ocriplasmin, and despite FTMH resolution.141 In some instances, there has been resolution of post-ocriplasmin SRF104 and ellipsoid layer abnormalities107,116,131–133 after ~1 year from injection. Most patients had a good VA outcome.116,131 Functionally, the retina has shown decreased (sometimes, flat) ERG107,133,137,140 responses, with progressive nyctalopia,106 light adaptation difficulties,142 progressive photopsias141 and visual field defects.137 Some of these complications have also been seen in animal models.143 ERG depression and abnormalities has also improved with time.107,133 Kaiser et al127 recently published a simultaneous safety evaluation of 465 ocriplasmin vs 187 placebo eyes for VMT with or without FTMH. Some of the serious adverse effects were as follows: worsened or new FTMH (5.2% vs 8.6%), nonresolution of VMT (1.1% vs 0.5%), retinal detachment (0.4% vs 1.6%), and decreased VA (0.6% vs 0.5%). Of note, almost half of the patients with decreased VA had complete resolution of VMT and there was only one patient in the ocriplasmin group whose etiology for decreased vision remained unknown. Safety profile evaluations had reported ocriplasmin as a “well-tolerated” treatment.106,126,127 Enlargement of FTMH144–146 has been seen after ocriplasmin injection. New-onset lamellar hole has also been reported anytime from 28 days to 7 months128,145,147 after ocriplasmin injection. Chatziralli et al145 described a new-onset lamellar hole accompanied by an interesting transient macular “remodeling”, which resolved with time. It is hypothesized however, that these new-onset macular holes are simply related to intravitreal injection.115,145 The combined data of MIVI TRUST study115 revealed that macular holes were noted in both placebo and treatment groups (8.6% vs 5.2%). Similar data were reported for retinal detachments.102 Additionally, FMTH reopening has been seen 2 years after initial resolution of macular hole and improvement of vision from VA 20/100 to VA 20/25.148 There is a subset of patients that have no response to ocriplasmin.149 The physiological effect of this enzyme in the eye tissues has been studied but has still not been fully elucidated. It has been hypothesized that it not only attacks laminin and fibrillin but may also attack other normal layers of the retina and vitreous.110,119,123,129 However, the ILM does not show specific signs of toxicity at the histology level when exposed to ocriplasmin.23 Are these adverse reactions genotype specific? Does the presence of glial cells in VMT or ERM dictate the failure of ocriplasmin treatment?23 To date, this remains an enigma.150

Ocriplasmin in other pathologies

Enzymatic vitreolysis has been shown to facilitate vitrectomy in different entities.103 In the pediatric population, a higher dose of 175 μm has been used as an adjunct to vitrectomy151 in patients with variable conditions (retinopathy of prematurity, macular hole, proliferative retinopathy, etc). During surgery, it was observed that ocriplasmin induced weakening of the vitreoretinal junction. This study was merely observatory because VMT release was not confirmed with OCT or any other imaging method. An unexplored area of enzymatic intervention is diabetic macular edema (DME) triggered by VMT.50,152,153 Rodrigues et al49 used C3F8 gas to treat six patients with VMT related to DME and only two patients showed VMT release when assessed with OCT. Surgical intervention to remove posterior hyaloid has been effective in decreasing the risk for DME. Macular edema may develop when unstable vitreal collagen leads to increased permeability and possible relocation of cells to the posterior hyaloid.152 Once the cells migrate, they may lead to traction in the macula. Complete vitreous liquefaction and detachment is related to less risk for DME. Can ocriplasmin serve as an aid to induce complete PVD and vitreous liquefaction to prevent DME? Results from MIVI-II-DME, a multicenter, double-masked, randomized, and sham-controlled trial, have already been collected. Response to different doses (25 μg, 75 μg, and 125 μg) was evaluated in selected patients. Results are not yet published.154 Another area of interest is AMD, in which vitreoretinal adhesions have been related to less response to anti-vascular endothelial growth factor therapy. Novack et al112 studied AMD patients of at least 50 years of age with active primary or recurrent choroidal neovascularization, presence of focal VMA, and with a vision 20/32 to 20/200. Results revealed that ocriplasmin has a safe profile and the majority of patients treated with ocriplasmin achieved full PVD with VMA. However, there was no VA improvement despite the use of less anti-vascular endothelial growth factor injections in the ocriplasmin group.112 Some patients had resolution of subfoveal drusenoid deposits after ocriplasmin injection and the previous diagnosis of AMD had to be modified.104 The effect of ocriplasmin in AMD has been previously studied,112 but there is no specific mention of drusen changes. This finding certainly deserves further clarification because a diagnosis of AMD is a life-changing occurrence for some patients. Retinoschisis has also improved after ocriplasmin injection. A young 27-year-old male with X-linked retinoschisis was treated effectively with ocriplasmin. The patient in this case showed no adverse effects or decreased vision. However, resolution of the schisis cavity recurred 1 month after injection.155

What is for the future?

For ocriplasmin, there are several trials that are in progress156 to better understand the effect of ocriplasmin in real human practice. The ORBIT trial (Ocriplasmin Research to Better Inform Treatment)157 is an observational, prospective, and multicenter study that is currently on and is expected to recruit 1,500 patients by April 2016. The OZONE trial158 by ThromboGenics®, completed in May 2015, will provide valuable information on adverse effects of ocriplasmin in the eye, as previously discussed in this review (including ellipsoid zone disruption with and without resolution, SRF collection, new-onset FTMH, impaired pupillary reflex, vascular changes, ERG changes, lens changes, quality of vision, etc).158 The OASIS trial159 will further investigate the effects of ocriplasmin injection using ERG and microperimetry results in 220 patients ≥18 years of age during a 2-year period in 25 different retina centers in the USA. Most of the subjects were reported to be female (67.3%) and White (89.5%). All subjects had VMA and partial PVD, with 76% presenting also with FTMH.159,160 Recent promising studies have included a combination of enzymatic approaches. Wang et al161 showed positive outcomes when plasmin was combined with hyaluronidase in rabbits. Zhi-Liang et al67 studied the effect of this combination in diabetic and nondiabetic rats, and their results indicated that the latter group achieved complete PVD 100% of the times. The overall outcome with this combination is to both liquefy vitreous and induce PVD. Future trials to attempt this combination in humans are yet to be designed. Additionally, a synthetic molecule ALG-1001 (Luminate®; Allegro Ophthalmics, San Juan Capistrano, CA, USA), intended to treat wet AMD and DME, showed additional induction of complete PVD in six of eleven patients, probably secondary to its blocking effect on integrin α3β1 receptors that bind retina with vitreous extracellular matrix. Clinical data reported a safe profile.162 ALG-1001, a Phase II, prospective, randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled clinical trial concluded in July 2015163 and showed resolution of VMT and VMA in 65% of eyes treated with 3.2 mg, the higher dose in the study. Luminate will probably be approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for VMT treatment earlier than for wet AMD or DME because the regulatory process is less extensive.164 It is yet to be determined if the cost–benefit balance will lean favorably toward the patients.

Conclusion

Ocriplasmin remains the focus of attention around the world for treating VMT and FTMH. The efficacy of ocriplasmin in treating other entities such as DME or AMD remains unclear. It is yet to be decided by physician experts whether ocriplasmin will become the standard of care for VMT and FTMH in future ophthalmology practice. With the herein-presented review, we have provided evidence-based data that will help physicians in deciding the best candidate. In the meantime, new data are explored step by step to fully understand the behavior of this renowned enzyme.
  150 in total

Review 1.  Morphology, pathology, and surgery of idiopathic vitreoretinal macular disorders. A review.

Authors:  W E Smiddy; R G Michels; W R Green
Journal:  Retina       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 4.256

2.  Ocriplasmin for foveal schisis in X-linked retinoschisis.

Authors:  Amar Patel; Lawrence Morse
Journal:  Retin Cases Brief Rep       Date:  2015

3.  Idiopathic macular holes. Observations, stages of formation, and implications for surgical intervention.

Authors:  R N Johnson; J D Gass
Journal:  Ophthalmology       Date:  1988-07       Impact factor: 12.079

4.  Real-life experience after intravitreal ocriplasmin for vitreomacular traction and macular hole: a spectral-domain optical coherence tomography prospective study.

Authors:  Irini Chatziralli; George Theodossiadis; Efstratios Parikakis; Ioannis Datseris; Panagiotis Theodossiadis
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2015-05-05       Impact factor: 3.117

5.  Intravitreal injection of microplasmin for treatment of vitreomacular adhesion: results of a prospective, randomized, sham-controlled phase II trial (the MIVI-IIT trial).

Authors:  Peter Stalmans; Christophe Delaey; Marc D de Smet; Edith van Dijkman; Steve Pakola
Journal:  Retina       Date:  2010 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 4.256

6.  Efficacy of plasmin enzymes and chondroitinase ABC in creating posterior vitreous separation in the pig: a masked, placebo-controlled in vivo study.

Authors:  Martin Hermel; Norbert F Schrage
Journal:  Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2006-08-10       Impact factor: 3.117

7.  Anatomic and visual outcomes of vitrectomy for vitreomacular traction syndrome.

Authors:  Andre J Witkin; Mark E Patron; Leonardo C Castro; Elias Reichel; Adam H Rogers; Caroline R Baumal; Jay S Duker
Journal:  Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging       Date:  2010-05-28

8.  Improved efficacy of ocriplasmin for vitreomacular traction release and transient changes in optic disk morphology.

Authors:  Koen Willekens; Luís Abegão Pinto; Evelien Vandewalle; Ingeborg Stalmans; Peter Stalmans
Journal:  Retina       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 4.256

9.  The role of recombinant lysine-plasminogen and recombinant urokinase and sulfur hexafluoride combination in inducing posterior vitreous detachment.

Authors:  Gamze Men; Gholam A Peyman; Mahmoud Genaidy; Po-Cheng Kuo; Fatemah Ghahramani; Diane A Blake; Yanno Bezerra; Georges Naaman; Eduardo Figueiredo
Journal:  Retina       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 4.256

10.  Macular Hole Progression following Ocriplasmin Intravitreal Injection.

Authors:  Edward Casswell; Guillermo Fernandez-Sanz; Danny Mitry; Sheila Luk; Rahila Zakir
Journal:  Case Rep Ophthalmol Med       Date:  2014-12-14
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  4 in total

1.  Vision Preference Value Scale and Patient Preferences in Choosing Therapy for Symptomatic Vitreomacular Interface Abnormality.

Authors:  Marguerite O Linz; Neil M Bressler; Voraporn Chaikitmongkol; Sobha Sivaprasad; Direk Patikulsila; Janejit Choovuthayakorn; Nawat Watanachai; Paradee Kunavisarut; Deepthy Menon; Mongkol Tadarati; Kátia Delalíbera Pacheco; Abanti Sanyal; Adrienne W Scott
Journal:  JAMA Ophthalmol       Date:  2018-06-01       Impact factor: 7.389

Review 2.  Internal limiting membrane peeling in macular hole surgery.

Authors:  Deepti Pradhan; Lalit Agarwal; Ichhya Joshi; Anamika Kushwaha; Kshitij Aditya; Archana Kumari
Journal:  Ger Med Sci       Date:  2022-06-02

Review 3.  [Biomarkers in full-thickness and lamellar defects of the macula].

Authors:  M Maier; R Schumann; J Friedrich; J Klaas; C Haritoglou
Journal:  Ophthalmologe       Date:  2021-03-01       Impact factor: 1.174

4.  PNEUMATIC VITREOLYSIS FOR RELIEF OF VITREOMACULAR TRACTION.

Authors:  Clement K Chan; Jason N Crosson; Calvin E Mein; Noha Daher
Journal:  Retina       Date:  2017-10       Impact factor: 4.256

  4 in total

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