| Literature DB >> 29382038 |
Abstract
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) plays a pivotal role in the development of neovascularization and edema from several common chorioretinal vascular conditions. The intravitreally injected drugs (aflibercept, bevacizumab, conbercept, pegaptanib, and ranibizumab) used to treat these conditions improve the visual acuity and macular morphology in most patients. Monthly or bimonthly injections were administered in the phase III pivotal trials but physicians usually individualize therapy with pro re nata (PRN) or treat and extend regimens. Despite these lower frequency treatment regimens, frequent injections and clinic visits are still needed to produce satisfactory outcomes. Newly developed drugs and refillable reservoirs with favorable pharmacokinetic profiles may extend durations of action and require fewer office visits. However, we have learned from previous experiences that the longer durations of action seen in strategically designed phase III trials often do not translate to less frequent injections in real-life clinical practice. Unfortunately, long-acting therapies that produce soluble VEGF receptors (encapsulated cell technology and adenovirus injected DNA) have failed in phase II trials. The development of longer duration therapies remains a difficult and frustrating process, and frequent drug injections are likely to remain the standard-of-care for years to come.Entities:
Keywords: age-related macular degeneration; diabetic macular edema; extended duration therapy; intravitreal injections; vascular endothelial growth factor
Year: 2018 PMID: 29382038 PMCID: PMC5874834 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics10010021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
This table lists the currently available anti-VEGF drugs, several that have failed clinical trials, and others that are in various stages of development. Additional information includes regulatory approvals and comments on drug characteristics, pharmacokinetics, preclinical studies, and clinical trials. AMD: age-related macular degeneration; DME: diabetic macular edema; DR: diabetic retinopathy; RVO: retinal vein occlusion; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; PlGF: placental growth factor; CNVM: choroidal neovascular membrane; RPE: retinal pigment epithelium; BCVA: best corrected visual acuity.
| Pegaptanib | Neovascular AMD |
Binds to VEGF165 Poor efficacy [ |
| Bevacizumab | Advanced carcinomas [ |
Recombinant, humanized, murine antibody to VEGF-A National Eye Institute sponsored studies have established effectiveness for neovascular AMD [ Inexpensive dose cost after compounding Most commonly used intraocular anti-VEGF drug in the United States |
| Ranibizumab | Neovascular AMD, DME, DR, Macular edema due to RVOs, Myopic CNVM [ |
Recombinant, humanized, murine antibody fragment (Fab) to VEGF-A [ Most thoroughly studied anti-VEGF drug |
| Aflibercept | Neovascular AMD [ |
Completely human, fusion protein, soluble receptor [ High affinity for VEGF-A, VEGF-B, and PlGF |
| Conbercept | Neovascular AMD (China only) |
Similar structure and binding affinity as aflibercept [ In phase III DME trial United States trials being planned |
| Abicipar | Designed Ankyrin Repeat Protein (DARPin) |
Pegylation may extend intravitreal half-life (estimated as 13.4 days in humans) [ Phase III CEDAR and SEQUOIA nAMD trials have completed enrollment q8week and q12week experimental arms; control is q4week ranibizumab |
| Brolucizumab | Single strand, antibody fragment |
Small size (26 kDa) allows for injection of large quantity of drug [ Phase III nAMD trials recently completed 57% and 52% of eyes sustained with q12week injection intervals [ |
| Ranibizumab Port Delivery System | Trans-scleral refillable drug reservoir |
Reservoir is refilled via trans-conjunctival injection Phase I study showed +10 letter improvement in BCVA with average of 4.8 refills [ Phase II LADDER trial underway with three different dose treatment arms [ |
| AVA-101 | Adenovirus vector Insertion of soluble VEGF-receptor DNA |
Injected subretinally after vitrectomy BCVA changes were better than ranibizumab in phase II trial but both arms performed poorly with minimal decrease in edema [ |
| NT-503 | Encapsulated Cell Technology using immortalized RPE cells |
Ciliary neurotrophic eluting device failed in dry AMD and retinitis pigmentosa trials [ High dose (NT-503) device failed in phase II neovascular AMD trial [ Currently being tested in patients with macular telangiectasia |
| Colloidal Carriers | Liposomal formulated ranibizumab |
Liposomal formulation delays drug release Ranibizumab can cross sclera after subconjunctival depot [ |
| Posterior Micropump Delivery System | Microelectromechanical Systems (MEMS) Technology |
Same technology as in insulin pumps Safely delivered 100 injections in animal models [ Three-month DME trial in humans was well tolerated [ |
| PAN-90806 | Small molecular weight drug |
Formulated for eye drop delivery In animal models, found to produce high retinal concentrations 17 h later Judged to show therapeutic promise in small human nAMD study [ |