| Literature DB >> 35418744 |
Kamal Kishore1,2, Pooja V Bhat3, Pradeep Venkatesh4, Cecilia C Canizela2.
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this review article is to provide a comprehensive review of the current applications of intravitreal DEX implant (Ozurdex®, Allergan Inc, Irvine, CA) for a variety of ophthalmic conditions - ranging from FDA approved indications to off-label uses. We have attempted to provide relevant evidence from the literature to help a reader develop an understanding of the biological and pharmacokinetic properties of DEX implant, its uses, and potential side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Ozurdex; diabetic macular edema; intravitreal DEX implant; retinal vein occlusion; uveitic macular edema; uveitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35418744 PMCID: PMC8995179 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S209395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Ultra-wide field image showing dexamethasone implant in the inferior vitreous in a patient with lasered proliferative diabetic retinopathy and recurrent macular edema.
Summary of Studies of DEX Implant in RVO with Macular Edema
| Study (Year) | Design | n | Intervention | Outcome Measure(s) | Time Point(s) | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kuppermann et al. (2007) | Phase 2, six-month, sham-controlled RCT, persistent macular edema, various etiologies | 315 | Single injection of DEX implant (350 mcg or 700 mcg) versus sham | ≥10 letter BCVA gain | Day 90 | 35% (700 mcg), 24% (350 mcg) and 13% sham gained ≥ 10 letters | 11% IOP increase ≥10 mm Hg |
| Haller et al. (2010) GENEVA Study Group | Phase 3, six-month, sham-controlled RCT, RVO with ME | 1267 | Single injection of DEX implant (350 mcg or 700 mcg) versus sham | ≥ 15 letter BCVA gain | Various time points. Peak benefit at day 60 | 29% gainers at day 60, same for both doses. No difference from sham at 180 | IOP ≥25 mm Hg in 16% at day 60 for both doses. Returned to baseline by day 180 |
| Haller et al. (2011) | Six-month open label extension of GENEVA trial | 1256 | Single DEX implant 0.7 mg at day 180 if indicated (n=997) | ≥ 15 letter BCVA gain | Day 60 | 32% gainers after second injection (30% after first) | ≥10 mm Hg IOP elevation in 12.6% after first, and 15.4 after the second. 30% showed cataract progression after two injections |
| Li et al. (2018) | Phase 3, six-month, sham-controlled RCT followed by two month open-label extension for eyes with ME from RVO | DEX 129, sham 130 | Single injection of 0.7 mg DEX implant versus sham. DEX implant at 6 months for pre-specified criteria | ≥ 15 letter BCVA gain | Various time points. Peak effect at day 60 | VA gainers. 35% DEX versus 12% sham. Mean change +10.6 letters (DEX) versus +1.7 letters (sham) | Duration of benefit 3–4 months. IOP normalized by 4 months |
| Gado and Macky (2014) | Six-month, RCT, eyes with perfused CRVO with ME | 60 (30 in each group) | 0.7 mg DEX implant versus PRN bevacizumab | BCVA change between the groups | Monthly for six months | No difference in BCVA between the two groups. Bevacizumab group had thinner CST at one month, no difference thereafter | Higher IOP in DEX group. All eyes in DEX group needed second implant around 4 months. Mean 4.3 injections in bevacizumab group |
| Hoerauf et al. (2016) COMRADE-C | Six-month RCT, RZB versus DEX implant for ME secondary to CRVO | 124 RZB, 119 DEX | Monthly RZB for three months followed by PRN versus single DEX implant | Change in BCVA | Monthly for six months | No difference in BCVA at month 1 and 2. RZB superior from month 3–6. +12.86 letters in RZB, +3 in DEX at 6 months | 4.52 injections in RZB versus single in DEX |
| Hattenbach et al. (2018) COMRADE-B | Six-month RCT, RZB versus DEX implant for ME secondary to BRVO | 126 RZB, 118 DEX | Monthly RZB for three months followed by PRN versus single DEX implant | Change in BCVA | Monthly for six months | No difference in BCVA at month 1 and 2. RZB superior from month 3–6. +17.3 letters in RZB, +9.2 in DEX at 6 months | 4.68 RZB injections versus single DEX |
| Bandello et al. (2018) | Twelve-month RCT, DEX v RZB in ME caused by BRVO | DEX 154, RZB 153 | DEX at baseline and 5 months, optional at month 10 or 11, RZB 5 monthly injections followed by PRN | Change in BCVA | 12 months | +7.4 letters in DEX, +17.4 in RZB at 12 months | 2.5 DEX v 8 RZB injections. RZB superior to DEX regarding visual outcomes |
| Chatziralli et al. (2017) RANIDEX | Retrospective Chart review, RZB v DEX for ME from CRVO | RZB 25, DEX 17 | RZB, or DEX monotherapy | Change in BCVA and CST | Various time points over one year | CST. RZB superior at month 5 and 6. No difference at month 12 | 5.1 injections in RZB, 2.1 in DEX. RZB group was likely undertreated |
| Gu et al. (2017) | Six-month retrospective comparative Study. RZB v DEX for ME from RVO | RZB 32, DEX 32 | RZB, or DEX monotherapy | BCVA and CST | Various time points up to six months | No difference between DEX and RZB | Only 3.4 and 3.5 injections of RZB in CRVO and BRVO respectively, likely undertreatment |
| Yuksel et al. (2018) | Retrospective study. RZB v DEX. ME from BRVO | 44 eyes. RZB 14, DEX 15, Laser 15 | RZB, DEX, or laser | BCVA change, percent gaining ≥10 letters, and CST | 6 months | No difference at six months in all three groups. +13.5 letters DEX, +7.1 RZB | Only 2.4 injections of RZB over 14 months, likely undertreatment |
| De Salles et al. (2021) | Retrospective study of eyes with ME from RVO | 492 | Anti-VEGF versus DEX | BCVA and CST change | Final follow-up (variable time) | Superior visual and anatomical gains in anti-VEGF group for both BRVO and CRVO | Patients received about 4.5 anti-VEGF injections, and 1.8 DEX injections annually |
| Gale et al. (2021) | Retrospective study of BRVO ME patients | 5661 | Laser, anti-VEGF or DEX implant | Change in BCVA | Up to 3 years | Anti-VEGF superior to DEX at 12 and 18 months. (+9.6 v +4.5 letters) | 5.1 anti-VEGF v 1.5 DEX injections at 12 months. |
| Gale et al. (2021) | Retrospective study of CRVO ME patients | 4626 | Anti-VEGF or DEX implant | Change in BCVA | 12, 18 and 36 months | Anti-VEGF superior to DEX at all time points (+10 v +8.4 letters at 12 months, +10.4 v +1.6 at 18 month, +11.5 v +5.7 at 36 months) | Injections at 12 months (anti-VEGF/DEX)=5.6/1.6 |
| Manoursaridis et al. (2017) | Retrospective chart review of RZB resistant ME secondary to RVO switched to DEX implant | 11 | Single DEX implant for eyes resistant to ≥3 RZB injections | Change in BCVA and CST | Various time points up to 6 months | 0.2 logMAR gain at 2 and 3 months. Return to baseline by month 6. CST improvement mainly at 2 and 3 months | DEX implant was effective in RZB resistant eyes for about 3 months |
| Georgalas et al. (2019) | Prospective nonrandomized. Switch to DEX for persistent ME from RVO after ≥ 5 anti-VEGF injections | 23 (13 BRVO, 10 CRVO) | DEX implant baseline, repeated as needed at six month | Change in BCVA and CST | 2,4,6,8,10 and 12 month visits | BRVO. Best VA at 4 months after first and second injections. | Reinjections sooner than 6 months are needed especially in CRVO |
| Mayer et al. (2012) | Prospective, consecutive, nonrandomized | 64 | 38 DEX, 26 3 monthly BCB followed by DEX | BCVA and CST change. | 6 months | No benefit from BCB loading | Recurrence of ME 3–4 months after DEX injection in various groups |
| Singer et al. (2012) | Prospective, nonrandomized | 34 | BCB followed 2 weeks later by DEX, retreatment as needed with same regimen | Time to reinject, BCVA gain, CST change | Monthly visits up to six months | +16.8 letter BCVA gain at six months, 64% gained ≥15 letters at six months | Retreatment in 82% at a mean of 126 days. No comparison group |
| Maturi et al. (2014) | Prospective randomized | 30 | BCB monotherapy PRN versus PRN BCB+ single DEX one week later. Repeat DEX at 4 months PRN | Primary: Change in BCVA | 6 months | No difference in BCVA, Fewer BCB (2 versus 3) and greater CST reduction in combination group, | The primary endpoint was not met. One less BCB injection in combination group balanced by DEX injection |
| Giuffre et al. (2020) | Prospective, nonrandomized. ME secondary to RVO unresponsive to aflibercept and DEX monotherapies | 30 | Same day DEX+ aflibercept. Retreatment allowed after 4 months | BCVA and CST changes | 12 months | No change in BCVA but CST reduction by 226 microns at 12 months. | Good anatomical response but not visual. Mean duration of ME was 25 months prior to combination therapy. |
| Harb et al. (2021) | Prospective nonrandomized | 74 | DEX monotherapy versus Aflibercept followed by DEX two weeks later combination | BCVA and CST change, number of retreatments | 12 months | Better BCVA gain in combination group compared to DEX monotherapy | No difference in CST or number of retreatments between the groups. Superior BCVA gain in combination group is hard to explain. |
| Bezatis et al. (2013) | Retrospective, noncomparative | 102 | Single DEX implant for ME from RVO | BCVA and CST change | Up to 6 months | Peak effect at two months (about 0.3 logMAR gain) | Retreatment in 50% around 4 months |
| Korobelnik et al. (2016) LOUVRE | Prospective, multicenter, real-world study in France | 375 | DEX monotherapy at baseline, retreatment at physician’s discretion | Primary. Change in BCVA | 2 years | At 6 months: DEX +5.5, DEX + other therapies +4.2 letters. | 2.6 DEX injections over two years. Mean interval 6.6 months between injections, 55% received other therapy (laser or anti-VEGF). Cataract progression in 40%, increased IOP in 34.4%. Switch to other therapies did not improve outcomes |
| Capone et al. (2014) SHASTA | Retrospective, multicenter chart review | 289 | DEX implant at baseline, other therapies per physician's discretion | Change in BCVA, CST, side effects | Variable (3–6 months after last DEX) | Peak change in BCVA from 4–20 weeks after DEX +1 line. 60% BRVO and 66% CRVO gained ≥2 lines | Mean reinjection interval 5.6 months, Increased IOP (≥10) in 32.6%. |
| Eter et al. (2017) | Prospective, multi-center, real-world, Germany | 573 | Single DEX at baseline. Additional treatment per physician's discretion | Change in BCVA at 12 weeks | 12 weeks. Duration of study 6 months | At 12 weeks, +7.8 letters gain, 34% gained ≥3 lines. | ≤90 days duration of ME had the best visual outcomes. 19.9% received other adjunctive treatments |
| Horner et al. (2020) | Retrospective, real-world, single site, UK | 66 | Initial RZB, later DEX/laser | Change in BCVA and CST | Year 1 and 3 | 40% gained ≥3 lines at year 3 | Diminished need for injections in year 3 compared to year 1 (2.5 v 5.5) |
| Kim et al. (2021) | Prospective, multicenter, real-world, S Korea | 700 | DEX implant at baseline. Subsequent treatment per physician's discretion | Change in BCVA, responder rate, side effects | Month 1, 2, 4 and 6 | Peak benefit at 2 months (approx. 2 lines). | Better vision gains in younger patients, worse presenting vision and treatment naïve status |
| Garay-Aramburu et al. (2021) | Retrospective, short-term, real-world study | 111 | DEX implant at baseline | Visual and anatomical improvement | Unspecified | Worse presenting vision (<60 ETDRS letters), first injection, and non-chronic ME predictor of better visual outcomes. | Baseline CST ≥400 microns and central macular volume >12 mm3 predictors of ≥50% CST reduction |
Abbreviations: RVO, retinal vein occlusion; RCT, randomized controlled trial; BCVA, best-corrected visual acuity; IOP, intraocular pressure; ME, macular edema; CRVO, central retinal vein occlusion; CST, central subfield thickness; BCB, bevacizumab; RZB, ranibizumab; BRVO, branch retinal vein occlusion; NS, non-significant; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.
Figure 2(A) Persistent macular edema in an eye with superotemporal branch retinal vein occlusion despite 9 intravitreal bevacizumab, 17 ranibizumab, and 3 grid laser treatments over 61 months. (B) Resolution of macular edema one month after DEX implant.
Figure 3(A) Fundus photo of an eye with intermediate uveitis showing marked vitreous haze and membranes. (B) Marked macular edema and subretinal fluid on OCT. (C) Three days after DEX implant showing marked improvement in vitreous haze and membranes. (D) Resolution of macular edema.
Summary of Studies of DEX Implant in Uveitis and Uveitic Macular Edema
| Study (Year) | Design | n | Intervention | Outcome Measure(s) | Time Point(s) | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lowder et al. (2011) The HURON Study Group | 26-week, sham-controlled RCT | 229 eyes with noninfectious posterior or intermediate uveitis | Single injection of DEX implant (350 mcg or 700 mcg) versus sham | Eyes with vitreous haze score of 0 | 8 weeks | 47% with DEX 0.7, 36% with DEX 0.35, 12% sham achieved primary end point. Visual benefit persisted through week 26. CST benefit at 8 weeks, but not at 26 | Superior visual results in DEX treated eyes at all visits. IOP≥25 mm Hg in 7.1% DEX 0.7, 8.7% DEX 0.35 and 4.2% for sham. |
| Pelegrin et al. (2015) | Retrospective | 42 eyes of 32 patients with UME | DEX implant, retreatment as needed | BCVA, CST reduction, side effects | Variable | Peak CST reduction at 1 month. Peak VA benefit at 3 months. No difference between vitrectomized and nonvitrectomized eyes | 45.2% needed reinjection after a median of 5 months. Ocular hypertension in 47.6%. |
| Tsang et al. (2017) | Retrospective | 25 eyes of 15 patients with UME | DEX implant, repeated as needed | Primary CST, secondary BCVA, time to reinjection | Variable | 91.4% had reduction in CST (−220 microns at 3 months). Approx 2 line VA gain at 3 months | 11 patients on concurrent immunesuppression. No difference in effect between first implant and repeat implant. |
| Khurana et al. (2017) | Prospective, noncomparative, single center | 10 eyes with UME and quiescent uveitis | DEX implant at baseline, retreatment as needed after day 90 | BCVA, CST | Day 90, and one year | +14.4 letter gain, and −140 microns CST reduction at 3 months. | 60% needed retreatment. Visual and anatomical benefits maintained through one year with retreatments. |
| Nobre-Cardoso et al. (2017) | Retrospective | 41 eyes of 31 patients with UME | DEX implant at baseline, retreatment as needed | BCVA, CST, complications | Variable | At one month, CST improved in most eyes, but 31.7% shows no improvement in VA | Ocular hypertension in 36.2%. Small and short-term effect of DEX implant. |
| Fabiani et al. (2017) | Retrospective | 22 eyes with UME | Single DEX implant | Systemic steroid sparing effect | 3 and six months | Reduced dose of systemic prednisone at 3 and 6 months. CST and BCVA improved at 1,3, and 6 month visits. | 13.6% developed ocular hypertension. Returned to baseline by 6 months. |
| Ratra et al. (2018) | Retrospective | 42 eyes of 34 patients with UME | DEX implant as needed | BCVA, CST | Variable | Visual, anatomical and steroid sparing effect of DEX implant. 10 eyes (24%) needed no other treatment. Oral steroids stopped in 40% | Only 11 eyes (26%) needed repeat injection after 12.6–20.9 months. Prolonged effect of DEX implant hard to explain. |
| Thorne et al. (2019) The POINT Trial | Six month, multicenter, randomized, clinical trial | 235 eyes of 192 patients with UME | PTA (40 mg), IVTA (4mg), DEX (0.7 mg)1:1:1 randomization. Retreatment permitted at 8 weeks in PTA and IVTA, and at 12 weeks in DEX | CST, BCVA, side effects | CST at 8 weeks. BCVA and IOP over six months | Both IVTA and DEX superior to PTA regarding CST reduction and BCVA, DEX noninferior to IVTA. Repeat injection 38 (48%) IVTA, 44 (56%) DEX. | Higher IOP in intravitreal groups compared to PTA, no difference between DEX and IVTA. |
Abbreviations: UME, uveitic macular edema; PTA, periocular triamcinolone acetonide; IVTA, intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide; CST, central subfield thickness.
Summary of Studies of DEX Implant in Diabetic Macular Edema
| Study (Year) | Design | n | Intervention | Outcome Measure(s) | Time Point(s) | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haller JA et al. (2010) | Sham-controlled RCT | 171 | Single injection DEX 0.7 mg, DEX 0.35 mg, or sham | ≥10 letter BCVA gain | 90 and 180 days | Day 90. Gainers 33.3% DEX 0.7, 21.1% DEX 0.35 | Phase II study |
| Pacella et al. (2013) | Prospective, nonrandomized, interventional | 20 eyes of 17 patients | Single DEX implant | BCVA and CST change | Various time points over 6 months | BCVA and CST gain from 3rd day until 3 months. (−.14 logMAR, −226 microns at 3 months) | Regression of BCVA and CST at month 4 and 6. Two eyes re-injected prior to six months |
| Callanan et al. (2013) PLACID | RCT | 253 eyes with diffuse DME | Combination. DEX baseline laser 1 month | BCVA (≥ 10 letter gain) and area of vascular leakage by angiography. | 12 months | Combination group better at 1 and 9 months, but no difference at 12 months | DEX implant offered no visual benefit to focal laser alone at 12 months. Combinatin group had greater decrease in vascular leakage area |
| Lazic et al. (2014) | Prospective, nonrandomized, interventional | 16 eyes of 15 patients | Single DEX, eyes with “unresponsive” DME after ≥3 monthly anti-VEGF injections | BCVA and CST change | Monthly for six months | Peak VA gain at 2 months, CST improvement at 1,2,3 months | Increased IOP at 1,2,3 months. Duration of therapeutic effect 3–4 months. |
| Boyer et al. (2011) | Prospective, nonrandomized, interventional | 55 eyes with DME and history of prior PPV | Single DEX implant | Primary: Change in CST and Secondary: change in BCVA | Week 8 and 26 | Week 8. −156 micron CST, +6 letters BCVA | 30% gained ≥10 letters at week 8 |
| Medeiros et al. (2014) | Retrospective, comparative | 58 eyes. 24 vitrectomized, 34 nonvitrectomized | Single DEX | BCVA and CST | Month 1, 3, 6 | Improved BCVA and CST at each visit. | No difference between vitrectomized and nonvitrectomized eyes |
| Medeiros et al. (2014) | Retrospective, noncomparative | 58 eyes with “refractory” DME | Single DEX | BCVA and CST | Month 1, 3, 6 | Reduction in CST at 1 and 3 month, some regression at month 6. Peak VA benefit at 3 months (about 2 lines) | Refractory not defined. |
| Boyer et al. (2014) The MEAD Study | 3-year, sham-controlled RCT | 1048 | 1:1:1 randomization DEX 0.7 mg, DEX 0.35 mg, sham. Retreatment allowed ≥ 6 months | ≥ 15 letter BCVA gain, CST | 3 years | Gainers: 22.2% (DEX 0.7), 18.4% (DEX 0.35) and 12% (sham). Mean CST reduction −111.6 microns (DEX 0.7), −107.9 (DEX 0.35), −41.9 (sham) | Cataract 67.9% phakic eyes (DEX 0.7), 64% (DEX 0.35). IOP elevation in about 25%, Overall mean improvement in BCVA only 3 to 4 letters |
| Maturi et al. (2015) | RCT | 40 eyes with “incomplete response to anti-VEGF injections” | BCB monotherapy versus combination (BCB baseline, DEX at month 1, and 5.9 PRN) | Change in BCVA, and CST | 12 months | Similar BCVA gain in both groups (+4.9 v +5.4 letters), Greater CST reduction in CST group (−45 microns v −30 microns) | 3 fewer BCB injections in combination group but required 2.1 DEX injections (no real benefit) |
| Totan et al. (2016) | Prospective, interventional, nonrandomized | 30 | Single DEX for eyes “resistant” to prior BCB | Change in BCVA and CST | 1, 3, and 6 months | BCVA gain at 1 and 3 months (about −0.14 logMAR), Improved CST at all three time points | Regression of effect between 3 and 6 months. |
| Shah S et al. (2016) | RCT | 50 | DEX q 3 months, v BCB monotherapy for persistent DME despite ≥3 anti-VEGF injections within 5 months | BCVA, CST reduction | 7 months | Similar BCVA gain (BCB +5.6, DEX +5.8 letters), greater CST reduction in DEX (−122 v −13 microns) | Eyes with “persistent” DME show improvement in vision with continued anti-VEGF injections |
| Chhablani et al. (2016) | Retrospective, comparative | 79 eyes (15 treatment naïve, 64 previously treated “recalcitrant”) | DEX at baseline, repeated as needed | BCVA, CST | Variable | Similar BCVA gain in both groups (about 0.15 logMAR) | “Real-life” study. Reinjection after mean 6.5 months |
| Callanan et al. (2017) | RCT, multi-center, noninferiority | DEX 181, RZB 182 | DEX every 5 months, versus RZB monthly PRN | BCVA, CST, percentage gainer ≥15 letters | 12 months | DEX +4.34, RZB +7.6 letters | DEX noninferior to RZB, greater decrease in fluorescein leakage area in DEX group |
| Castro-Navarro et al. (2019) | Retrospective, comparative | 84 eyes (29 treatment naïve and 55 previously treated “refractory”) | Single DEX implant | BCVA, CST | 2, 4 and 6 months | Similar CST improvement in both groups. Naïve eyes more likely than treated eyes to gain ≥10 letters | “Refractory” not defined. |
| Maturi et al. (2018) DRCR.net Protocol U | Six-month, multicenter, RCT | 236 patients with persistent DME despite ≥ 3 anti-VEGF injections over the previous 20 weeks enrolled. All given RZB every month for 3 more injections. Those with still persistent DME (n=129) were randomized. | Combination: DEX every 3 months plus monthly RZB v monthly RZB monotherapy | BCVA gain, proportion of eyes gaining ≥15 letters, CST change | 24 weeks | No difference in BCVA gain (+3 letters) between the two groups. 11% v 2% gained ≥15 letters in combination v monotherapy respectively. Greater CST reduction in combination v monotherapy (110 μm v 62 μm) | 30% developed increased IOP in combination group. No BCVA benefit from combination either in phakic or pseudophakic eyes (subgroup analysis). No difference between short duration (6 months) or longer duration of DME |
Abbreviations: BCB, bevacizumab; PPV, pars plana vitrectomy; RZB, ranibizumab.
Figure 4(A) Diabetic macular edema persistent after 10 intravitreal bevacizumab and 13 aflibercept injections over 40 months. (B) Resolution of macular edema one month after DEX implant.