| Literature DB >> 35608780 |
Bridgitte Shen Lee1, Melissa Toyos2, Paul Karpecki3,4, Jessica Schiffbauer5, John Sheppard5.
Abstract
Keratoconjunctivitis sicca, also known as dry eye disease (DED), is a prevalent, multifactorial disease associated with compromised ocular lubrication, ocular surface inflammation and damage, and ocular symptoms. Several anti-inflammatory, topical ophthalmic therapies are available to treat clinical signs and symptoms of DED in the USA and Europe. Cyclosporine A (CsA)-based formulations include an ophthalmic emulsion of 0.05% CsA (CsA 0.05%), a cationic emulsion (CE) of CsA 0.1% (CsA CE), and an aqueous nanomicellar formulation of 0.09% CsA (OTX-101). Lifitegrast is a 5% ophthalmic solution of a lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 antagonist that is believed to target T cell activation and recruitment to inhibit ocular inflammation. Here we provide a comprehensive review summarising preclinical studies and pivotal trial data for these treatments to provide a complete understanding of their efficacy and safety profile. Overall, data in the evaluated studies show a favourable risk-benefit profile for the use of targeted topical anti-inflammatory pharmacologic treatments in patients with DED. Pivotal trials for CsA 0.05%, CsA CE, OTX-101, and lifitegrast clearly demonstrate treatment efficacy compared to vehicle across treatments with no serious ocular treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs). Patients using ophthalmic treatments reported ocular TEAEs more frequently than those treated with vehicle; however, relatively few TEAEs led to treatment discontinuation. The specific signs and symptoms of DED that improve with treatment vary with the treatment prescribed. Long-term and direct comparative studies between treatments are needed to further understand treatment differences in efficacy and safety profiles.Entities:
Keywords: Cyclosporine A; Dry eye; Keratoconjunctivitis sicca; Lifitegrast; OTX-101; Ocular drug therapy; Ocular inflammation; Tear deficiency
Year: 2022 PMID: 35608780 PMCID: PMC9253213 DOI: 10.1007/s40123-022-00516-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmol Ther
Differences in study design, patient demographics, and disposition of included studies
| Design | Treatment arms | Dose and duration | Follow-up period | Patient Demographics | Key inclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hwang et al. (2020) [ | |||||
| Preclinical | CsA 0.05% 1:50 | Once, 24 hours | 24 hours | N/A N/A N/A | N/A |
| CsA CE 1:50 | |||||
| CsA CE 1:100 | |||||
| Sall et al. (2000) [ | |||||
| Multicentre, randomised, double-masked, parallel-group, 6-month, vehicle-controlled, phase 3 | CsA 0.05% (n = 293) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 6 months | 1, 3, 4, 6 | 58.7 ± 13.9 49 (16.7) Caucasian | Adults diagnosed with moderate-to-severe DED Schirmer’s test ≤5 mm/5 min in ≥1 eye Sum of corneal and interpalpebral conjunctival staining of ≥+5 with CFS ≥+2 OSDI score of 0.1 Subjective Facial Expression Scale score ≥3 |
| Vehicle (n = 292) | 59.9 ± 14.3 59 (20.2) Caucasian | ||||
| Stevenson et al. (2000) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, double-masked, parallel-group, dose-response controlled, phase 2 | CsA 0.05% (n = 31) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 1, 2, 3 | 59 (range: 31–88) 26 (16.0) Caucasian | ≥21 years of age with diagnosis of DED with or without Sjögren’s syndrome refractory to conventional management Schirmer’s test 7 mm/5 min in ≥1 eye CFS ≥1 in either eye ≥1 moderate dry eye-related symptom(s) |
| Vehicle (n = 33) | |||||
| Stonecipher et al. (2016) [ | |||||
| Prospective, single-centre, open-label, phase 4 | CsA 0.05% (n = 40) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 6 months | 1, 6 | 59.4 ± 9.1 5 (12.5) Caucasian | Adults with history of bilateral DED Use of or desire to use artificial tear substitutes within past 6 months Score of ≥2 for at least 1 dry eye symptom OSDI score >12 Schirmer’s test <10 mm/5 min CFS of 2–4 in ≥1 region and central corneal staining ≥2 Conjunctival redness score ≥1 |
| Baudouin et al. (2017) [ | |||||
| Multicentre, double-masked, randomised, parallel-group, controlled, phase 3 | CsA CE (n = 241) | 1 drop QD in both eyes for 6 months | 1, 3, 6 | 57.6 ± 12.9 36 (14.9) Caucasian | Moderate-to-severe DED refractory to conventional management ≥1 symptoms of ocular discomfort in at least 1 eye (eligible eye) Eligible eye TBUT ≤8 seconds, CFS score 2–4 (modified Oxford scale), Schirmer’s test score ≥2 mm/5 min and <10 mm/5 min, and a corneal and conjunctival staining score ≥4 (Van Bijsterveld scale) No use of systemic or topical CsA, tacrolimus, or sirolimus within 6 months prior to study entry No use of topical corticosteroids or prostaglandins within 1 month before study entry |
| Vehicle (n = 248) | 58.8 ± 12.7 40 (16.1) Caucasian | ||||
| Baudouin et al. (2017) [ | |||||
Multicentre, double-masked, randomised, vehicle-controlled, parallel-group, phase 3, 6 month period (part 1), followed by an open-label 6 month follow-up period (part 2) | CsA CE (n = 154)* CsA CE/CsA CE (n = 128)† | 1 drop QD for 12 months | 6, 9, 12 | NR NR NR | Adults with severe DED, as determined by CFS score = 4 (modified Oxford scale) Schirmer’s test ≥2 mm/5 min and <10 mm/5 min; OSDI score ≥23 |
Vehicle (n = 91)* Vehicle/CsA CE (n = 79)† | NR NR NR | ||||
| Leonardi et al. (2016) [ | |||||
| Multicentre, randomised, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, parallel-group, phase 3 | CsA CE (n = 154) | 1 drop in both eyes QD for 6 months | 1, 3, 6 | 60.8 ± 13.5 28 (18.2) NR | Adults with severe DED CFS score = 4 (modified Oxford scale) Schirmer’s test 2–10 mm/5 min OSDI score ≥23 |
| Vehicle (n = 91) | 62.1 ± 11.8 8 (8.8) NR | ||||
| Burade et al. (2020) [ | |||||
| Preclinical | OTX-101 0.09% BID (n = 11) | 10 μL in conjunctival sac of both eyes QD or BID for 60 days | 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2 | 0.31 - 0.36 77 (100) N/A | NOD mice spontaneously develop Sjögren’s syndrome. This disease model manifests typical features of dry eye and secretory dysfunction |
| OTX-101 0.09% QD (n = 11) | |||||
| CsA 0.05% BID (n = 11) | |||||
| CsA CE QD (n = 11) | |||||
| Vehicle BID (n = 11) | |||||
| Untreated Healthy C57Bl6/J (n = 11) | |||||
| Untreated NOD (n = 11) | |||||
| Goldberg et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, vehicle-controlled, double-masked, phase 3 | OTX-101 0.09% (n = 371) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 1, 2, 3 | 58.4 ± 14.1 56 (15.1) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED ≥6 months Clinical diagnosis of bilateral DED at screening Conjunctival staining score 3–9 Global symptom score ≥40 |
| Vehicle (n = 373) | 59.5 ± 14.7 62 (16.6) Caucasian | ||||
| Karpecki et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Open-label, single-centre, single-arm, phase 1 | OTX-101 0.09% (n = 16) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 7 days | 0.23, 0.27, 0.30 | 38.2 ± 10.9 10 (62.5) Caucasian | Adults with BMI 18–32 kg/m2; medically healthy No nicotine/tobacco use Non-diseased eyes IOP 10–21 mm Hg in each eye Corrected visual acuity >20/40 in each eye |
| Malhotra et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, pooled analysis of phase 2b/3 and phase 3 studies | OTX-101 0.09% (n = 523) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 1, 2, 3 | 58.6 ± 14.2 86 (16.4) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED ≥6 months Clinical diagnosis of bilateral DED Conjunctival staining score 3–9 in same eye at screening and baseline visits Snellen VA >20/200 in each eye |
| Vehicle (n = 525) | 59.5 ± 14.4 94 (17.9) Caucasian | ||||
| Sheppard et al. (2020) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, pooled analysis of phase 2b/3 and phase 3 studies | OTX-101 0.09% (n = 311) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 1, 2, 3 | 60.6 ± 13.4 46 (14.8) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED ≥6 months Clinical diagnosis of bilateral DED Conjunctival staining score 3–9 in same eye at screening and baseline visits Snellen VA >20/200 in each eye SANDE score ≥40 at both screening and baseline visits |
| Vehicle (n = 310) | 61.7 ± 13.0 58 (18.7) Caucasian | ||||
| Sheppard et al. (2021) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, phase 3 treatment phase with subsequent long-term, open-label extension phase | OTX-101 0.09% (n = 371) § OTX-101 0.09% /OTX-101 0.09% (n = 129)¶ | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 1, 2, 3, 7, 10, 13, 16 | 58.4 ± 14.1 56 (15.1) Caucasian 58.4 ± 15.5 20 (15.5) NR | Adults with a self-reported history of DED ≥6 months Clinical diagnosis of bilateral DED Conjunctival staining score 3–9 in same eye at screening and baseline visits Snellen VA >20/200 in each eye SANDE score ≥40 at both screening and baseline visits |
Vehicle (n = 373)§ Vehicle/OTX-101 0.09% (n = 129)¶ | 59.5 ± 14.7 62 (16.6) Caucasian 61.5 ± 14.2 22 (17.1) NR | ||||
| Smyth-Medina et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, pooled analysis of phase 2b/3 and phase 3 studies | OTX-101 0.09% (n = 523) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3 | 58.6 ± 14.2 86 (16.4) Caucasian | Adults with a clinical diagnosis of bilateral DED for ≥6 months Conjunctival staining score 3–9 in same eye at screening and baseline visits |
| Vehicle (n = 525) | 59.5 ± 14.4 94 (17.9) Caucasian | ||||
| Tauber et al. (2018) [ | |||||
| Randomised, multicentre, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, dose-ranging, phase 2b/3 | OTX-101 0.05% (n = 151) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3 | 61.9 ± 13.3 32 (21.2) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED for ≥6 months Diagnosis of bilateral DED Snellen VA of ≥20/200 Conjunctival staining score 3–9 SANDE score ≥40 at screening and baseline visits |
| OTX-101 0.09% (n = 152) | 59.2 ± 14.6 30 (19.7) Caucasian | ||||
| Vehicle (n = 152) | 59.3 ± 13.8 32 (21.1) Caucasian | ||||
| Weiss et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Preclinical | Single dose OTX-101 0.05% (n = 20) | Single bilateral distribution of treatment | 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, 24, 48, 72 hours | NR NR N/A | NR |
| Single dose CsA 0.05% (n = 20) | |||||
| Repeat dose OTX-101 0.01% (n = 10) | 4 bilateral instillations per day for 7 days | 4, 7 days | |||
| Repeat dose OTX-101 0.05% (n = 20) | |||||
| Repeat dose OTX-101 0.1% (n = 20) | |||||
| Repeat dose CsA 0.05% (n = 20) | |||||
| Chung et al. (2018) [ | |||||
| Preclinical | Lifitegrast OPUS-1 Rabbits (n = 25) | Rabbits: 1.75 mg/eye/dose BID for 5 days Dogs: One 10 mL dose IV and one 30 μL dose in eye | Rabbits: 0.25, 0.5, 1, 3, and 8 hours Dogs: 0.25, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 4, 8, 24, 48, 72, 96, 120, 144, and 168 hours | Rabbits: ≥0.5 N/A Dogs: 0.50–0.58 6 (54.5) N/A | N/A |
Lifitegrast OPUS-2 Rabbits (n = 25) | |||||
14C-lifitegrast Dogs (n = 10) | |||||
| Donnenfeld et al. (2016) [ | |||||
| Prospective, randomised, multicentre, double-masked, vehicle-controlled phase 3 | Lifitegrast 5.0% (n = 221) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 360 days | 0.5, 3, 6, 9, 12 | 58.8 ± 12.4 56 (25.3) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED BCVA of 0.7 logMAR or better CFS score ≥2 in ≥1 region VAS ≥40 for eye dryness or discomfort Use of artificial tears within 6 months Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm |
| Vehicle (n = 111) | 61.0 ± 13.2 26 (23.4) Caucasian | ||||
| Holland et al. (2017) [ | |||||
| Randomised, double-masked, multicentre, vehicle-controlled, phase 3 | Lifitegrast (n = 355) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1.5, 3 | 58.8 ± 14.1 87 (24.5) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED BCVA of ≥0.7 logMAR; CFS score ≥2 in ≥1 region VAS ≥40 for EDS in both eyes; conjunctival redness score ≥1 in ≥1 eye Use of artificial tears within 30 days Positive response in at least 1 eye at visits 1 and 2 based on these criteria: ICSS ≥0.5 and Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm |
| Placebo (n = 356) | 58.6 ± 14.8 87 (24.4) Caucasian | ||||
| Nichols et al. (2018) [ | |||||
| Prospective, multicentre, randomised, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, phase 3 | Lifitegrast (n = 355) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1.5, 3 | 58.8 ± 14.1 87 (24.5) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm EDS score VAS ≥40 Corneal staining score ≥2 in ≥1 region Artificial tear use within 30 days of study |
| Placebo (n = 356) | 58.6 ± 14.8 87 (24.4) Caucasian | ||||
| Nichols et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Multicentre, randomised, prospective, double-masked, placebo-controlled, parallel-arm, pooled analysis of phase 2 and phase 3 studies | Lifitegrast (n = 1287) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 or 360 days | 3, 12 | 59.3 ± 13.3 291 (22.6) Caucasian | Adults with DED Corneal staining score ≥2 Redness score ≥1 Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm Change in ICSS ≥1; ICSS ≥0.5 ODS ≥3 at 2 consecutive time points during CAE 1 and 2 Artificial tear use within 30 days of study EDS score VAS ≥40 |
| Placebo (n = 1177) | 59.6 ± 13.7 298 (25.3) Caucasian | ||||
| Paskowitz et al. (2012) [ | |||||
| Prospective, randomised, double-masked, phase 1b | Lifitegrast 0.1% (n = 4) | 1 drop in test eye BID for 1 week | NR | NR NR NR | Adults scheduled for pars plana vitrectomy |
| Lifitegrast 1.0% (n = 4) | |||||
| Lifitegrast 5.0% (n = 5) | |||||
| Pepose et al. (2019) [ | |||||
| Prospective, single-arm, open-label, 12-week, longitudinal, phase 4 | Lifitegrast (n = 26) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1.5, 3 | 67.4 ± 9.6 3 (11.5) Caucasian | Adults diagnosed with DED VAS score ≥40 In Group 1: tear osmolarity 308–320 mOsm/L in ≥1 eye In Group 2: tear osmolarity ≥320 mOsm/L in ≥1 eye |
| Semba et al. (2012) [ | |||||
| Prospective, randomised, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, parallel-arm, phase 2 | Lifitegrast 0.1% (n = 57) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1.5, 3 | 63.1 ± 13.1 10 (17.5) Caucasian | Adults with history of bilateral DED Use or desire to use artificial tear substitutes within past 6 months Conjunctival redness CFS ≥2 Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm BCVA of ≥0.7 logMAR |
| Lifitegrast 1.0% (n = 57) | 63.6 ± 11.9 17 (29.8) Caucasian | ||||
| Lifitegrast 5.0% (n = 58) | 62.3 ± 12.2 11 (19.0) Caucasian | ||||
| Placebo (n = 58) | 60.4 ± 12.9 13 (22.4) Caucasian | ||||
| Sheppard et al. (2014) [ | |||||
| Multicentre, randomised, prospective, double-masked, placebo-controlled, parallel-arm, phase 3 | Lifitegrast 5.0% (n = 293) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1.5, 3 | 60.2 ± 12.2 64 (21.8) Caucasian | Adults with history of bilateral DED Use or desire to use artificial tear substitutes within past 6 months Conjunctival redness CFS ≥2 Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm BCVA of ≥0.7 logMAR |
| Placebo (n = 295) | 61.1 ± 11.8 78 (26.4) Caucasian | ||||
| Tauber et al. (2015) [ | |||||
| Multicentre, randomised, prospective, double-masked, vehicle-controlled, parallel-arm, phase 3 | Lifitegrast 5.0% (n = 358) | 1 drop in both eyes BID for 84 days | 0.5, 1.5, 3 | 58.7 ± 13.9 73 (20.4) Caucasian | Adults with a self-reported history of DED Use of artificial tears within past 30 days BCVA of ≥0.7 logMAR CFS score ≥2 in ≥1 region VAS ≥40 for EDS in both eyes Conjunctival redness score ≥1 in ≥1 eye EDS score VAS ≥40 Positive response in ≥1 eye at visits 1 and 2 ICSS ≥0.5 and Schirmer’s test 1–10 mm |
| Vehicle (n = 360) | 58.9 ± 14.3 95 (26.4) Caucasian | ||||
BCVA best-corrected visual acuity, BID twice daily, BMI body mass index, CAE controlled adverse environment, CFS corneal fluorescein staining, CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, CsA CE 0.1% (1 mg/mL) cyclosporine A cationic emulsion, DED dry eye disease, EDS eye dryness score, ICSS inferior corneal staining score, IOP intraocular pressure, IV intravenous, logMAR logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution in both eyes, min minimum, N/A not applicable, NOD NOD.B10.H2b, NR not reported, ODS ocular discomfort score, OSDI Ocular Surface Disease Index, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%, QD once daily, SANDE Symptom Assessment iN Dry Eye, SD standard deviation, TBUT tear break-up time, VA visual acuity, VAS visual analogue scale
*Part 1, 0–6 months of treatment
†Part 2, 6–12 months of CsA CE
§Treatment phase
¶Open-label extension
Summary of statistically significant between-group differences (P < 0.05) in clinical efficacy
| Intervention | Efficacy endpoints* | Time point# | Estimate by group | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | Comparison† | |||
| Sall et al. 2000 [ | ||||
| CsA 0.05% | CFB in corneal staining | Month 4 | NR | NR |
| Month 6 | NR | NR | ||
| Mean CFB in Schirmer’s score (anaesthetised) | Month 3 | NR | NR | |
| Decrease in artificial tear use | Month 6 | NR | NR | |
| CFB in blurred vision | Month 1 | NR | NR | |
| Month 3 | NR | NR | ||
| Month 4 | NR | NR | ||
| Month 6 | NR | NR | ||
| Stevenson et al. 2000 [ | ||||
| CsA 0.05% | Improvement in sandy or gritty feeling | Treatment week 12 | NR | NR |
| Post-treatment week 2 | NR | NR | ||
| Post-treatment week 4 | NR | NR | ||
| Improvement in ocular dryness | Post-treatment week 4 | NR | NR | |
| Baudouin et al. 2017 [ | ||||
| CsA CE | Mean CFB in CFS | Month 1 | − 0.8 | − 0.5 |
| Month 3 | − 0.9 | − 0.7 | ||
| Month 6 | − 1.1 | − 0.8 | ||
Percent of patients with ≥ 25% improvement in ocular discomfort (VAS) | Month 6 | 50.2% | 42.0% | |
| Median HLA-DR expression CFB | Month 6 | − 21,875.6 | − 1334.2 | |
| Leonardi et al. 2016 [ | ||||
| CsA CE | Mean adjusted CFB in CFS | Month 3 | NR | NR |
| Month 6 | − 1.76 | − 1.42 | ||
| Ocular surface inflammation (HLA-DR expression) | Month 1 | 52,306.0 | 66,825.0 | |
| Month 6 | 49,917.0 | 76,062.0 | ||
| Goldberg et al. 2019 [ | ||||
| OTX-101 0.09% | Percentage of eyes with an increase of ≥ 10 mm from baseline in Schirmer’s test scores | Day 84 | 16.6 (95% CI 13.4, 19.7) | 9.2 (95% CI 6.8, 11.7) |
| Mean CFB in total corneal staining scores | Day 28 | − 0.8 ± 1.9 | − 0.6 ± 1.8 | |
| Day 56 | − 1.3 ± 1.9 | − 0.9 ± 2.0 | ||
| Day 84 | − 1.4 ± 2.0 | − 1.2 ± 2.2 | ||
| Percentage of eyes with clear central corneas | Day 28 | 54.1 | 47.3 | |
| Day 56 | 61.7 | 52.1 | ||
| Day 84 | 65.0 | 56.9 | ||
LS mean CFB In total conjunctival staining | Day 56 | NR | NR | |
| Day 84 | NR | NR | ||
| Malhotra et al. 2019 [ | ||||
| OTX-101 0.09% | LS mean CFB in CFS total scores | Day 28 | − 0.9 ± 0.1 | − 0.5 ± 0.1 |
| Day 56 | NR | NR | ||
| Day 84 | − 1.4 ± 0.1 | − 0.9 ± 0.1 | ||
| Sheppard et al. (2020) [ | ||||
| OTX-101 0.09% | ITT population: Percentage of eyes with increase in Schirmer’s score ≥ 10 mm from baseline | Day 84 or at early discontinuation | 16.6 | 9.0 |
| ITT population: Percentage of eyes with increase in Schirmer’s score > 5 mm from baseline | Day 84 or at early discontinuation | 28.1% | 17.7% | |
| ITT population: Schirmer’s score | Day 84 or at early discontinuation | 14.6 ± 9.9 | 12.8 ± 9.2 | |
| Subgroup with Schirmer’s score < 10 mm: Percentage of eyes with increase in Schirmer’s score ≥ 10 mm from baseline | Day 84 or at early discontinuation | 18.7 | 10.2 | |
| Subgroup with Schirmer’s score < 10 mm: Percentage of eyes with increase in Schirmer’s score > 5 mm from baseline | Day 84 or at early discontinuation | 31.0% | 19.6% | |
| Subgroup with Schirmer’s score < 10 mm: Schirmer’s score | Day 84 or at early discontinuation | 9.9 ± 7.7 | 8.1 ± 6.6 | |
| Sheppard et al. (2021) [ | ||||
| OTX-101 0.09% (worse eye) | Percentage of patients with Schirmer’s score increase of ≥ 10 mm from baseline | Week 12 | 20.5 | 11.3 |
| Mean CFB in Schirmer’s scores | Week 12 | 4.0 ± 7.8 | 2.2 ± 6.8 | |
| LS mean ± SE CFB in total conjunctival staining | Week 8 | − 1.5 ± 0.1 | − 0.9 ± 0.1 | |
| Week 12 | − 1.7 ± 0.1 | − 1.1 ± 0.1 | ||
| Percentage of patients with clear central corneas | Week 4 | 55.1 | 45.6 | |
| Week 12 | 64 | 55.3 | ||
| Smyth-Medina et al. (2019) [ | ||||
| OTX-101 0.09% | Mean total conjunctival staining score in both eyes | Day 28 | NR | NR |
| Day 56 | NR | NR | ||
| Day 84 | 3.9 ± 2.3 | 4.5 ± 2.5 | ||
| Mean inferior conjunctival staining score in both eyes | Day 28 | NR | NR | |
| Day 56 | NR | NR | ||
| Day 84 | 1.1 ± 0.7 | 1.3 ± 0.7 | ||
| Mean superior conjunctival staining score in both eyes | Day 28 | NR | NR | |
| Day 56 | NR | NR | ||
| Day 84 | 0.7 ± 0.6 | 0.9 ± 0.7 | ||
| Mean lateral conjunctival staining score in both eyes | Day 56 | NR | NR | |
| Day 84 | 0.6 ± 0.7 | 0.8 ± 0.7 | ||
| Tauber et al. (2018) [ | ||||
| OTX-101 0.09% | LS mean CFB in total conjunctival staining scores | Day 84 | NR | NR |
| Mean CFB in total CFS scores | Day 28 | NR | NR | |
| Day 84 | NR | NR | ||
| Mean CFB in Schirmer’s test scores | Day 84 | 3.5 mm | 0 mm | |
| Holland et al. (2017) [ | ||||
| Lifitegrast | Mean CFB in eye dryness score (VAS) | Day 14 | 7.9¶ (95% CI 4.3, 11.4) | |
| Day 42 | 9.3¶ (95% CI 5.4, 13.2) | |||
| Day 84 | 7.2¶ (95% CI 3.0, 11.3) | |||
| Semba et al. (2012) [ | ||||
| Lifitegrast | Percentage of subjects demonstrating an increase of inferior corneal staining > 1.0 point CFB | Day 84 | 0 | 16.1 |
| Percentage of subjects demonstrating improvement in OSDI visual-related score | Day 84 | 50.0% | 19.6% | |
| Inferior corneal staining score mean CFB | Day 84 | NR | NR | |
| Sheppard et al. (2014) [ | ||||
| Lifitegrast | Mean CFB in inferior CFS score | Day 84 | NR | NR |
Percentage of subjects with ≥ 1.0-point reduction in inferior corneal staining score | Day 84 | 22.2 | 13.9 | |
| Mean CFB in total CFS score | Day 84 | NR | NR | |
| Mean CFB in superior CFS score | Day 84 | NR | NR | |
| Mean CFB in nasal conjunctival staining score | Day 14 | NR | NR | |
| Day 42 | NR | NR | ||
| Day 84 | NR | NR | ||
| Mean CFB in total conjunctival staining score | Day 14 | NR | NR | |
| Day 84 | NR | NR | ||
| Proportion of subjects with ≥ 1.0-point reduction in nasal conjunctival staining | Day 84 | 24.6% | 15.6% | |
| Mean eye dryness score | Day 42 | NR | NR | |
| Day 84 | NR | NR | ||
| Mean ocular discomfort score | Day 84 | NR | NR | |
| Tauber et al. (2015) [ | ||||
| Lifitegrast | Eye dryness (VAS) CFB | Day 84 | − 35.3 ± 28.6 | − 22.75 ± 28.4 |
Data presented as mean ± SD, unless indicated otherwise
CFB change from baseline, CFS corneal fluorescein staining, CI confidence interval, CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, CsA CE 0.1% (1 mg/mL) cyclosporine A cationic emulsion, F Fisher exact test, HLA-DR human leukocyte antigen DR, ITT intent-to-treat, lifitegrast lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5.0%, LS least squares, NR not reported, OSDI ocular surface disease index, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%, SE standard error, SD standard deviation, VAS visual analogue scale
*Only endpoints with statistically significant between-group results are included in this table
†Comparison group is vehicle, unless indicated otherwise
§Nominal p value
¶Treatment effect
#Time points reported as published
Adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation
| Study | Treatment | Adverse event | Treatment | Comparator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sall et al. (2000) [ | CsA 0.05% | Any TEAE | 19 (6.5) | 13 (4.5) |
| Burning and stinging | 5 (1.7) | 5 (1.7) | ||
| Stevenson et al. (2000) [ | CsA 0.05% | Any ocular TEAE | 0 | 2 (6.0) |
| Stonecipher et al. (2016) [ | CsA 0.05% | Any non-ocular TEAE | 2 (5.0) | NA |
| Baudouin et al. (2017) [ | CsA CE | Any ocular TEAE | 24 (9.9) | 18 (7.2) |
| Baudouin et al. (2017) [ | CsA CE | Any TEAE | 21 (13.6)* 10 (7.8)† | 9 (10.0)* |
| Any ocular TEAE | 18 (11.7)* 9 (7.0)† | 6 (6.7)* | ||
| Treatment-related TEAE | 16 (10.4)* 8 (6.3)† | 5 (5.6)* | ||
| Instillation site pain | 5 (3.9)† | |||
| Goldberg et al. (2019) [ | OTX-101 | Instillation site pain | 9 (2.4) | 0 |
| Sheppard et al. (2021) [ | OTX-101 | Any TEAE | 25 (9.7) | NA |
| Smyth-Medina et al. (2019) [ | OTX-101 | Any TEAE | 15 (2.9) | 5 (1.0) |
| Tauber et al. (2018) [ | OTX-101 | Any TEAE | 5 (3.3) | 6 (3.9) |
| Donnenfeld et al. (2016) [ | Lifitegrast | Any TEAE | 27 (12.3) | 10 (9.0) |
| Any ocular TEAE | 18 (8.2) | 6 (5.4) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 4 (1.8) | 0 | ||
| Lacrimation increased | 3 (1.4) | 1 (0.9) | ||
| Visual acuity reduced | 3 (1.4) | 0 | ||
| Instillation site irritation | 2 (0.9) | 2 (1.8) | ||
| Vision blurred | 2 (0.9) | 1 (0.9) | ||
| Instillation site pain | 2 (0.9) | 1 (0.9) | ||
| Any non-ocular TEAE | 9 (4.1) | 4 (3.6) | ||
| Dysgeusia | 4 (1.8) | 0 | ||
| Holland et al. (2017) [ | Lifitegrast | Any TEAE | 21 (5.9) | 9 (2.5) |
| Any ocular TEAE | 17 (4.8) | 6 (1.7) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 5 (1.4) | 2 (0.6) | ||
| Instillation site irritation | 4 (1.1) | 0 | ||
| Any non-ocular TEAE | 6 (1.7) | 3 (0.8) | ||
| Nichols et al. (2018) [ | Lifitegrast | Instillation site reaction | 5 (1.4) | 2 (0.6) |
| Instillation site irritation | 4 (1.1) | 0 | ||
| Nichols et al. (2019) [ | Lifitegrast | Any TEAE | 90 (7.0) | 31 (2.6) |
| Any ocular TEAE | 71 (5.5) | 18 (1.5) | ||
| Instillation site pain | 8 (0.6) | 1 (0.1) | ||
| Instillation site irritation | 13 (1.0) | 2 (0.2) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 12 (0.9) | 2 (0.2) | ||
| Any non-ocular TEAE | 24 (1.9) | 13 (1.1) | ||
| Dysgeusia | 6 (0.5) | 0 | ||
| Semba et al. (2012) [ | Lifitegrast | Any TEAE | 6 (10.3) | 1 (1.7) |
| Tauber et al. (2015) [ | Lifitegrast | Any TEAE | 26 (7.2) | 3 (0.8) |
| Any ocular TEAE | 23 (6.4) | 2 (0.6) | ||
| Any non-ocular TEAE | 6 (1.7) | 1 (0.3) |
CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, CsA CE 0.1% (1 mg/mL) cyclosporine A cationic emulsion, TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event, NA not applicable, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%
*Part 1, 0–6 months of treatment
†Part 2, 6–12 months of CsA CE
Summary of the most common (occurring in more than 5% of patients) TEAEs
| Study | Treatment | Adverse event | Treatment, | Vehicle, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sall et al. (2000)§ [ | CsA 0.05% | Burning eye | 43 (14.7) | 19 (6.5) |
| Stonecipher et al. (2016) [ | CsA 0.05% | Instillation site burn | 3 (7.5) | NA |
| Instillation site pain | 3 (7.5) | |||
| Eye irritation | 2 (5.0) | |||
| Baudouin et al. (2017)* [ | Eye irritation | 39 (16.1) | 6 (2.4) | |
| CsA CE | Instillation site irritation | 22 (9.1) | 4 (1.6) | |
| Eye pain | 17 (7.0) | 7 (2.8) | ||
| Baudouin et al. (2017)*† [ | CsA CE | Instillation site pain | 10 (7.8) | NA |
| Leonardi et al. (2016)* [ | CsA CE | Instillation site pain | 45 (29.2) | 8.1 (8.9) |
| Goldberg et al. 2019 [ | OTX-101 0.09% | Instillation site pain | 90 (24.2) | 16 (4.3) |
| Conjunctival hyperaemia | 30 (8.1) | 19 (5.1) | ||
| Karpecki et al. (2019)* | OTX-101 0.09% | Eye irritation | 1 (6.2) | NA |
| Eye pain | 1 (6.2) | |||
| Eye pruritis | 1 (6.2) | |||
| Malhotra et al. (2019) [ | OTX-101 0.09% | Instillation site pain | 114 (21.8) | 21 (4.0) |
| Conjunctival hyperaemia | 30 (5.7) | 19 (3.6) | ||
| Sheppard et al. (2020) [ | OTX-101 0.09% | Instillation site pain | 114 (21.8) | 21 (4.0) |
| Conjunctival hyperaemia | 30 (5.7) | 19 (3.6) | ||
| Sheppard et al. (2021) [ | OTX-101 0.09% | Instillation site pain | 59 (22.9) | NA |
| Conjunctival hyperaemia | 26 (10.1) | |||
| Punctate keratitis | 16 (6.2) | |||
| Smyth-Medina et al. (2019) [ | OTX-101 0.09% | Instillation site pain | 114 (21.8) | 21 (4.0) |
| Conjunctival hyperaemia | 30 (5.7) | 19 (3.6) | ||
| Tauber et al. (2018) [ | OTX-101 0.09% | Instillation site pain | 23 (15.1) | 5 (3.3) |
| Donnenfeld et al. (2016) [ | Lifitegrast | Dysgeusia | 36 (16.4) | 2 (1.8) |
| Instillation site irritation (burning) | 33 (15.0) | 5 (4.5) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 29 (13.2) | 2 (1.8) | ||
| Visual acuity reduced | 25 (11.4) | 7 (6.3) | ||
| Dry eye | 4 (1.8) | 6 (5.4) | ||
| Holland et al. (2017) [ | Lifitegrast | Instillation site irritation | 65 (18.2) | 11 (3.1) |
| Dysgeusia | 46 (12.9) | 1 (0.3) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 45 (12.6) | 19 (5.4) | ||
| Nichols et al. (2018) [ | Lifitegrast | Instillation site irritation | 4.7 (18.2) | 0.5 (3.1) |
| Instillation site reaction | 3.3 (12.6) | 0.9 (5.4) | ||
| Nichols et al. (2019) [ | Lifitegrast | Instillation site irritation | 195 (15.2) | 33 (2.8) |
| Dysgeusia | 186 (14.5) | 4 (0.3) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 158 (12.3) | 27 (2.3) | ||
| Instillation site pain | 126 (9.8) | 25 (2.1) | ||
| Semba et al. (2012) [ | Lifitegrast | Any instillation site condition¶ | 35 (60.3) | 9 (15.5) |
| Conjunctival haemorrhage | 3 (5.2) | 0 | ||
| Sheppard et al. (2014) [ | Lifitegrast | Instillation site irritation | 69 (24.0) | 12 (4.0) |
| Instillation site pain | 63 (22.0) | 11 (4.0) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 50 (17.0) | 2 (1.0) | ||
| Instillation site pruritis | 19 (7.0) | 6 (2.0) | ||
| Tauber et al. (2015) [ | Lifitegrast | Dysgeusia | 58 (16.2) | 1 (0.3) |
| Instillation site irritation | 28 (7.8) | 5 (1.4) | ||
| Instillation site reaction | 25 (7.0) | 4 (1.1) | ||
| Reduced visual acuity | 18 (5.0) | 23 (6.4) |
CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, CsA CE 0.1% (1 mg/mL) cyclosporine A cationic emulsion, N/A not applicable, TEAE treatment-emergent adverse event, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%
*Noted as treatment-related TEAEs
†Part 2 of study
§TEAEs listed occurred cyclosporine groups combined
¶Includes all adverse events at the site of treatment administration (e.g. discomfort, irritation, pain)
Fig. 1Change from baseline in conjunctival staining score with a CsA 0.05%, b CsA CE, c OTX-101 0.09%, and d lifitegrast treatments. CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, CsA CE 0.1% (1 mg/mL) cyclosporine A cationic emulsion, lifitegrast lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5.0%, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%, Ph phase, SD standard deviation, SE standard error
Fig. 2Change from baseline in corneal staining score with a CsA 0.05%, b OTX-101 0.09%, and c lifitegrast treatments. CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, lifitegrast lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5.0%, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%, Ph phase, SE standard error
Fig. 3Change from baseline in Schirmer’s test score with a CsA 0.05%, b CsA CE, and c OTX-101 0.09%. *Worse eye analysis. CsA 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, CsA CE 0.1% (1 mg/mL) cyclosporine A cationic emulsion, NR not reported, OTX-101 cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%, Ph phase, SD standard deviation, SE standard error
| Several topical pharmacologic therapies are approved for the treatment of dry eye disease; however, there are no head-to-head pivotal trials comparing these treatments. |
| A comprehensive review summarising data from preclinical studies and pivotal trials for cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, cyclosporine emulsion 0.1%, cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09%, and lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5% was conducted to provide a complete understanding of their efficacy and safety profile. |
| Overall, these topical ophthalmic therapies are safe and well tolerated and demonstrate clinically and statistically significant improvements in signs and symptoms of dry eye disease. |
| Clinical data show a favourable risk–benefit profile for the use of targeted topical anti-inflammatory pharmacologic treatments in patients with dry eye disease; although many patients treated with these agents experience ocular treatment-emergent adverse events, the rate of treatment discontinuation is relatively low. |
| The specific signs and symptoms of dry eye disease that improve vary with the treatment prescribed. |