| Literature DB >> 34974541 |
Faruque Ghanchi1, Rupert Bourne2, Susan M Downes3, Richard Gale4, Christina Rennie5, Ian Tapply2, Sobha Sivaprasad6.
Abstract
In the real-world setting, there is suboptimal compliance with treatments that require frequent administration and assessment visits. This undertreatment frequently has negative consequences in eye disease and carries a real risk to vision. For example, patients with glaucoma risk progression of visual loss even with a small number of missed doses, and patients with neovascular age-related degeneration (nAMD) who fail to attend a bi-monthly clinic appointment to receive an intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) drug injections may lose the initial vision gains in vision. Protracted regular treatment schedules represent a high burden not only for patients and families, but also healthcare professionals, systems, and ultimately society too. There has been a clear need for longer-acting therapies that reduce the frequency, and therefore the burden, of treatment interventions. Several longer-acting interventions for nAMD, diabetic macular oedema, retinal vein occlusion, uveitis and glaucoma have either been developed or are in late-phase development, some of which employ novel mechanisms of actions, and all of which of promise longer (≥3 month) treatment intervals. This review delivers an overview of anti-VEGF agents with longer durations of action, DARPins, bispecific anti-VEGF/Ang2 therapies, anti-PDGF and anti-integrin therapy, Rho-kinase inhibitors, the Port Delivery System, steroids, gene therapy for retina and uveitis, and for glaucoma, ROCK inhibitors, implants and plugs, and SLT laser and MIGS. The review also refers to the potential of artificial intelligence to tailor treatment efficacy with a resulting reduction in treatment burden.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34974541 PMCID: PMC9151779 DOI: 10.1038/s41433-021-01766-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye (Lond) ISSN: 0950-222X Impact factor: 4.456
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the types of ocular therapeutics and interventions that can deliver long therapeutic durations of action.
For retinal disorders intravitreal injections are employed to deliver various antibodies, extended release depot preparations and implants, as well as new biologics and some gene therapy. Subretinal injections (after vitrectomy) are used to deliver gene therapy, suprachoroidal injection route is employed to deliver steroids and has potential for use with other agents. Port delivery system anchored at pars plana is used as a reservoir of therapeutic agent that dissolves in vitreous over time. For glaucoma the options include extended release implants in the anterior chamber, MIGS devices and selective laser trabeculoplasty.
Long-acting Anti-VEGF pharmacotherapies for nAMD, BRVO, CRVO and DMO.
| Aflibercept | Human recombinant fusion protein; combines the second Ig domain of VEGFR-1 and third Ig binding domain of VEGFR-2 with the constant Fc portion of IgG1 | Soluble decoy receptor with high affinity for binding to VEGF-A and PlGF | nAMD, DMO, BRVO, CRVO, myopic CNV | nAMD: Initially q4w for 3 doses, then q8w, then T&E BRVO/CRVO: q1m DMO: Initially q4w for 5 doses, then q4w for rest of first year, then T&E |
| Brolucizumab | Humanised, single-chain variable fragment (scFv) antibody | Soluble decoy receptor with high affinity to neutralise all VEGF-A isoforms | nAMD | nAMD: Initially q4w for 3 doses, then q8w (if disease activity is present) or q12w (if disease activity is not present). |
| Conbercept | Human recombinant fusion protein; second Ig domain of VEGFR-1 and the third and fourth Ig domain of VEGFR-2 with the Fc portion of human IgG1. | Soluble decoy receptor with high affinity for binding to VEGF-A and PlGF | N/A | Monthly for three doses, then q3m or T&E or PRN dosing for up to q12m |
| Abicipar | Designed ankyrin repeat protein (DARPin)-based therapy | Binds all VEGF isoforms | N/A | q12w dosing regimens were evaluated; development discontinued. |
| Faricimab | Bispecific antibody: modified Fc portion of humanised IgG with one anti-Ang2 Fab and one anti-VEGF-A Fab | Blocks VEGF-A and angiopoietin-2; modified Fc portion reduces both systemic absorption and potential for ocular inflammation | N/A | q4w, q8w, q12w and q16w dosing regimens and PDS under evaluation |
| KSI-301 | Bioconjugate: humanised anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody and phosphorylcholine-based polymer added to prolong duration of molecule in eye | Blocks all VEGF isoforms | N/A | nAMD trials: q3m to q5m regimen evaluated. |
| RGX-314 | Gene therapy, encodes an anti-VEGF Fab | AAV8 encoding anti-VEGF-A similar to Ranibizumab | N/A | Single dose (potentially) |
| ADVM-022 | Gene therapy: encodes aflibercept | AAV encoding anti-VEGF-A similar to aflibercept | nAMD | Single dose (potentially) |
DMO diabetic macular oedema, BRVO branch retina vein occlusion, CNV choroidal neovascularisation, CRVO central retinal vein occlusion, Fab fragment, antigen binding, Ig immunoglobulin, m month, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, PDS Port Delivery System, PIGF placenta growth factor, PRN pro re nata (as needed), q quaque (every), R receptor, T&E treat-and-extend, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, w weeks.
Anti-VEGF biosimilars in developmenta.
| Company | Compound name | Registered clinical trials | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aflibercept biosimilars | |||
| Amgen | ABP 938 | NCT04270747 | III |
| Alteogen | ALT-L9 | NCT04058535 | I |
| Coherus Biosciences | CHS-2020 | – | |
| Formycon | FYB203 | NCT04522167 | III |
| Momenta/Mylan | MYL-1701P | NCT03610646, NCT04674800 | III (both) |
| Samsung Bioepis | SB15 | NCT04450329 | III |
| Ranibizumab biosimilars | |||
| Coherus Biosciences/Bioeq | FYB201 | NCT02611778 | III |
| Lupin | LUBT010 | NCT04690556 | III |
| Samsung Bioepis | SB11 | NCT03150589 | III |
| Xbrane | Xlucane | NCT03805100 | III |
| Bevacizumab biosimilars | |||
| Outlook therapeutics | ONS-5010 | NCT03834753 | III |
| Pfizer | Bevacizumab-bvzr/Zirabev | Currently only oncology indications | |
| Amgen/Allergan | Bevacizumab-awwb/MVASI | Currently only oncology indications | |
aDuration of efficacy to be determined.
Non-anti-VEGF long-acting retina and glaucoma pharmacotherapies.
| Dexamethasone (Ozurdex) | Glucocorticoid | Agonist of the glucocorticoid receptor | DMO, RVO, uveitis | Single-use biodegradable implant lasting 3–4 months |
| Fluocinolone acetonide (Iluvien) | Glucocorticoid | Agonist of the glucocorticoid receptor | DMO, uveitis | Single-use biodegradable implant lasting ≤36 months |
| Triamcinolone acetonide (CLS-TA; Xipere) | Glucocorticoid | Agonist of the glucocorticoid receptor | N/A | 12 weekly dosing for the treatment of noninfectious uveitis. |
| Risuteganib (Luminate) | Anti-integrin peptide | Targets integrins αvβ3, αvβ5, and α5β1 | nAMD, DMO | nAMD: Initially q4w for three doses, then at week 20 as needed |
| GB-102 | Sunitinib maleate polymer nanoparticle extended-release formulation | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor | N/A | nAMD: 6-monthly dosing |
| OTX-TKI | Axitinib intravitreal implant, suprachoroidally administered | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor | N/A | nAMD: 12-monthly dosing |
| PAN-90806 | Topically administered tyrosine kinase inhibitor suspension that reaches the retina via the trans-scleral vascular route. | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor | N/A | Daily topical drops (which may extend anti-VEGF intravitreal injection intervals to ≥3 months). |
| GT005 | Recombinant non‐replicating AAV vector encoding human complement factor I (CFI) | Addresses depletion in CFI levels causing complement dysfunction | N/A | nAMD: single-dose under evaluation |
| Bimatoprost Implant (Durysta) | Analogue of prostaglandin F2α | Ester prodrug; increases outflow of aqueous fluid from the eye; does not act on any known prostaglandin or prostamide receptor; believed to work via trabecular meshwork and uveoscleral pathways | Glaucoma | Single-use biodegradable implant lasting 3–4 months under evaluationa |
| Travoprost XR | Analogue of prostaglandin F2α | Ester prodrug; increases outflow of aqueous fluid from the eye; does not act on any known prostaglandin or prostamide receptor; believed to work via trabecular meshwork and uveoscleral pathways | Glaucoma | Single-use biodegradable implant lasting 3–4 months under evaluation; single-use punctal plug lasting 90 days under evaluation |
DMO diabetic macular oedema, BRVO branch retina vein occlusion, CNV choroidal neovascularisation, CRVO central retinal vein occlusion, Fab fragment, antigen binding, GA geographic atrophy, Ig immunoglobulin, m month, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, PRN pro re nata (as needed), q quaque (every), w weeks, AAV adeno-associated virus.
aFDA-approved regimen; not yet approved by the European Medicines Agency.