| Literature DB >> 30229441 |
William Fusi-Rubiano1, Rebecca R Blow2, Mark Lane1, Rupal Morjaria1,3, Alastair K Denniston4,5,6.
Abstract
Diabetic macular edema (DMO) is a leading cause of blindness in the working age population. Although anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapy provided a major advance in treatment of DMO for many patients, there is a significant proportion of patients who maintain persistent DMO and have minimal response to anti-VEGF treatment. Iluvien (fluocinolone acetonide 0.19 mg [FAc]) is an important additional treatment option for DMO. In this review we describe the clinical context and the evidence for the use of the FAc implant in treating DMO, from pilot to randomized controlled studies, to later phase real world data. These studies indicate that the FAc implant is effective, well tolerated and a cost-effective option in the treatment of insufficiently responsive DMO.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetic macular edema; Fluocinolone acetonide; Iluvien
Year: 2018 PMID: 30229441 PMCID: PMC6258573 DOI: 10.1007/s40123-018-0145-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmol Ther
Summary of real world data publications for the fluocinolone acetonide 0.19 mg (FAc 0.19 mg) implant
| First author | Type of study | Number of eyes (number of participants) | Duration of follow-up (months) | Mean CRT reduction (µm) | Mean BCVA gain at last visit (ETDRS letters) | IOP-related adverse events ( | Cataract formation requiring surgery ( | Endophthalmitis ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bertelmann 2015 [ | Case report | 2 (1) | 13 months for eye 1 6 months for eye 2 | 270 for eye 1 139 for eye 2 | 5L for eye 1 and 10L for eye 2 | 1/2 (managed with drops) | 1/2 | 0 |
| Elaraoud 2016 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 22 (22) | 3 | 148.9 | 6.4L | 1/22 (managed with drops) | n/a | 0 |
| Elaraoud 2016 [ | Case series | 12 (6) | 6 | 296.9 | 10L | 0 | n/a | 0 |
| Elaraoud 2016 [ | Case series | 10 (5) | 12 | 357.9 | 10.5L | 0 | n/a | 0 |
| Massin 2016 [ | Prospective study comparing prior laser (group 1) vs prior laser and anti-VEGF (group 2) | 17 (16) Group 1: 7 (6) Group 2: 10 (10) | 12 | Group 1: 299 Group 2: 251 | Group 1: 5.6L Group 2: 0.9L | 3/17 (managed with drops) | 1/17 (1/5 phakic eyes) | 0 |
| Alfqawi 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 28 (23) | 12 | 198 | 8L | 3/28 (managed with drops) | n/a | 1/28 |
| Figueira 2017 [ | Prospective phase 4 study (RESPOND) | 12 (12) | 12 | 292 | 3.7L | 5/12 (managed with drops) | 1/12 (1/4 phakic eyes) | 0 |
| El-Ghrably 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 57 (57) 46 with 3 months of data, 34 with 6 months of data, 22 with 12 months of data | 3, 6, 12 | 3 months: 102 6 months: 117 12 months: 126 | 3 months: 5.8L 6 months: 6.7L 12 months: 5.1L | 6/57 (managed with drops) | n/a | 0 |
| Holden/Currie 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort study (ICE-UK) | 233 (208) | 12 | 153 (median) | 4.3L (median) | 29/233 (managed with drops). | 6/233 (6/26 phakic eyes) | 0 |
| Quhill 2016 [ | Case report | 1 (1) | 24 | 507 | 15L | 0 | n/a | 0 |
| Bailey 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 345 (305) 120 with 18 months of data/53 with 24 months of data | 14 (120 eyes had 18 months and 53 had 24 months) | 95 | 4.5L at 18 months/5.3L at 24 months | 48/345 (managed with drops) 1/345 required trabeculectomy | n/a | n/a |
| Fusi-Rubiano 2018 [ | Retrospective cohort study | 29 (27) 22 with 24 months of data/6 with 36 months of data | 26 (22 eyes had 24 months and 6 had 36 months) | 114 (103 at 24 months/65 at 36 months) | 6.5L at 24 months/11L at 36 months | 2/29 (managed with drops) | n/a | 0 |
CRT Central retinal thickness, BCVA best corrected visual acuity, ETDRS early treatment for diabetic retinopathy study, IOP intraocular pressure
an/a: All eyes are pseudophakic or underwent combined cataract/implant at baseline