| Literature DB >> 32166538 |
Sanjay Asrani1, Jason Bacharach2, Edward Holland3, Hayley McKee4, Huan Sheng4, Richard A Lewis4,5, Casey C Kopczynski4, Theresa Heah4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: New open-angle glaucoma (OAG) and ocular hypertension (OHT) therapies that reduce treatment burden and improve outcomes relative to currently available agents are needed. Netarsudil, a novel Rho kinase inhibitor approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, reduces intraocular pressure (IOP) by increasing trabecular outflow. Two phase 3 superiority studies compared a fixed-dose combination (FDC) of netarsudil and the prostaglandin latanoprost with each active component for IOP-lowering efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trial; Fixed-dose combination; Glaucoma; Intraocular pressure; Latanoprost; Netarsudil; Ocular hypertension; Prostaglandin analogue; Rho kinase inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32166538 PMCID: PMC7140751 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01277-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Baseline demographics and patient characteristics
| Characteristic | Netarsudil/latanoprost FDC | Netarsudil | Latanoprost | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, year | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 64.3 (11.57) | 64.6 (10.76) | 64.9 (11.21) | 64.6 (11.17) |
| Median, range | 65.0 (18, 88) | 66.0 (22, 93) | 67.0 (22, 99) | 66.0 (18, 99) |
| ≥ 65, | 256 (53.0) | 283 (56.7) | 279 (57.4) | 818 (55.7) |
| Gender (male), | 197 (40.8) | 210 (42.1) | 206 (42.4) | 613 (41.8) |
| Race, | ||||
| White | 323 (66.9) | 332 (66.5) | 320 (65.8) | 975 (66.4) |
| Black or African American | 143 (29.6) | 146 (29.3) | 146 (30.0) | 435 (29.6) |
| Asian | 14 (2.9) | 17 (3.4) | 16 (3.3) | 47 (3.2) |
| Othera | 3 (0.6) | 4 (0.8) | 4 (0.8) | 11 (0.7) |
| Iris eye color of study eye, | ||||
| Blue/grey/green | 117 (24.2) | 121 (24.2) | 114 (23.5) | 352 (24.0) |
| Brown/black | 313 (64.8) | 322 (64.5) | 328 (67.5) | 963 (65.6) |
| Hazel | 53 (11.0) | 56 (11.2) | 44 (9.1) | 153 (10.4) |
| Prior ocular hypertensive therapy | ||||
| Prior prostaglandin therapy, | 296 (61.3) | 311 (62.3) | 276 (56.8) | 883 (60.1) |
| IOP mmHg at screening (08:00) in study eye, mean (SD) | 19.597 (4.2) | 19.966 (4.3) | 19.484 (4.3) | 19.685 (4.3) |
| Study eye diagnosis, | ||||
| Ocular hypertension | 137 (28.4) | 125 (25.1) | 134 (27.6) | 396 (27.0) |
| Open-angle glaucoma | 345 (71.4) | 374 (74.9) | 352 (72.4) | 1071 (73.0) |
Percentages are based on the number of patients (n) in a given treatment group for the analysis population
IOP intraocular pressure, SD standard deviation
aOther includes Native American, American Indian or Alaskan native, and multiple races
Fig. 1Mean intraocular pressure over 3 months. (ITT population) Post-baseline IOP is least-squares mean (± SE). Markov chain Monte Carlo methods were used to impute missing data. ***p < 0.0001 versus netarsudil and latanoprost. Mean IOP in the ITT pooled efficacy population is listed in the table below. CI confidence interval, FDC fixed-dose combination, IOP intraocular pressure, ITT intent to treat, SE standard error
Fig. 2Percentages of patients reaching prespecified categorical treatment targets at month 3. a Mean diurnal IOP (mmHg). b Percentage reduction from baseline in mean diurnal IOP. FDC fixed-dose combination, IOP intraocular pressure. ***p < 0.0001 vs. netarsudil and latanoprost from Fisher’s exact tests. Baseline refers to the visit 3 (day 1) data
Summary of adverse events
| Netarsudil/latanoprost FDC | Netarsudil | Latanoprost | |
|---|---|---|---|
| AEs, | 1266 | 1190 | 540 |
| Ocular AEs, | 1121 | 1033 | 336 |
| Non-ocular AEs, | 145 | 157 | 204 |
| Serious AEs, | 9 | 19 | 19 |
| Treatment-related AEs, | 931 | 836 | 243 |
| Treatment-related serious AEs, | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| AEs by maximum severity, | |||
| Mild | 280 (58.1) | 267 (53.6) | 187 (38.3) |
| Moderate | 75 (15.6) | 68 (13.7) | 42 (8.6) |
| Severe | 13 (2.7) | 16 (3.2) | 8 (1.6) |
Percentages are based on the number of patients (n) in a given treatment group for the safety population
AE treatment emergent adverse event
Summary of ocular adverse events reported in at least 5% of patients
| Netarsudil/latanoprost FDC | Netarsudil | Latanoprost | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eye disorders, | |||
| Conjunctival hyperemia | 283 (58.7) | 234 (47.0) | 108 (22.1) |
| Cornea verticillate | 74 (15.4) | 58 (11.6) | 0 |
| Conjunctival hemorrhage | 52 (10.8) | 72 (14.5) | 5 (1.0) |
| Eye pruritus | 37 (7.7) | 23 (4.6) | 5 (1.0) |
| Punctate keratitis | 17 (3.5) | 27 (5.4) | 14 (2.9) |
| Visual acuity reduced | 25 (5.2) | 21 (4.2) | 9 (1.8) |
| Lacrimation increased | 25 (5.2) | 28 (5.6) | 1 (0.2) |
| Administration site conditions, | |||
| Instillation site pain | 97 (20.1) | 83 (16.7) | 33 (6.8) |
| Instillation site discomfort | 25 (5.2) | 23 (4.6) | 5 (1.0) |
In the system organ class or preferred term, n is the number of patients with at least one adverse event; % is based on the number of patients (n) in a given treatment group for the safety population
When reporting incidence, a patient was only counted once if they ever experienced an event within the system organ class or individual preferred term. System organ class and preferred term are based on Version 19.0 of the MedDRA coding dictionary
| A fixed-dose combination (FDC) therapy to lower intraocular pressure (IOP), consisting of latanoprost and the novel Rho kinase inhibitor netarsudil, has been approved in the USA for the treatment of open-angle glaucoma and ocular hypertension. |
| The 12-month MERCURY-1 and 3-month MERCURY-2 clinical trials demonstrated that the netarsudil/latanoprost FDC lowered IOP significantly more than the individual components, with an acceptable safety profile. |
| The purpose of this analysis was to pool and analyze data from MERCURY-1 and -2 in order to further characterize netarsudil/latanoprost FDC in a large, combined population. |
| Efficacy data confirmed the results of the individual studies, indicating significantly superior IOP lowering with the FDC, compared to netarsudil alone and latanoprost alone, at every time point assessed over 3 months. |
| No new safety signal emerged, with common adverse events of conjunctival hyperemia, cornea verticillata, and conjunctival hemorrhage. No treatment-related serious adverse events were reported. |