Official Title

Efficacy and Safety of Dexamethasone Nanoparticles Eye Drops in Diabetic Macular Edema
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Study Participants

    144
Anti-inflammatory or anti-angiogenic drugs play an ever- increasing role in the treatment of diabetic macular edema (DME). The drug delivery systems, such as injections of corticosteroid and or vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) antibodies into the vitreous cavity or slow release drug capsules surgically implanted in the eyes run the risk of surgical complications including infections, hemorrhages and cataracts and place a huge demand on eye care resources significantly increase the risk of cardiovascular events and death.

A non-invasive drug delivery platform with steroid eye drops, reaching the back of the eye to treat DME and other retinal diseases would circumvent most of these problems.

A novel drug delivery platform is required for ocular therapy. Oculis ehf. has developed a drug delivery platform, which is based on cyclodextrin nanoparticles that dissolve in the tear fluid to form water-soluble drug/cyclodextrin complex nanoparticles. Animal and initial clinical testing has shown the potential for this technology to increase the drug concentration in the eye tissues including the retina and therefore treat retinal diseases like DME.
Study Started
Sep 18
2017
Primary Completion
Mar 28
2019
Study Completion
Mar 28
2019
Results Posted
Jun 02
2022
Last Update
Jun 28
2022

Drug Dexamethasone nanoparticles eye drops

DexNP 15 mg/mL eye drops 3 times a day (every 8 hours) for 12 weeks

DexNP Eye Drop Experimental

The study eye received 1 DexNP eye drop 3 times a day (every 8 hours) for 12 weeks.

Vehicle Eye Drop Placebo Comparator

The study eye received 1 vehicle eye drop 3 times a day (every 8 hours) for 12 weeks.

Criteria

Key Inclusion Criteria:

Had DME of less than 3 years duration since diagnosis with presence of intraretinal and/or subretinal fluid in the study eye, with CMT of ≥ 310 µm by SD-OCT at baseline (Visit 2) (as measured by the Investigator).

Had definite retinal thickening in the study eye due to DME involving the central macula based on the Investigator's clinical evaluation and by SD-OCT;

...

Key Exclusion Criteria:

Had macular edema considered to be due to a cause other than DME;

Had a decrease in BCVA due to causes other than DME (e.g., foveal atrophy, pigment abnormalities, dense subfoveal hard exudates, previous vitreoretinal surgery, central serous retinopathy, non-retinal condition, substantial cataract, macular ischemia) that is likely to be decreasing BCVA by 3 lines or more (i.e., cataract would be reducing acuity to 20/40 or worse if eye was otherwise normal).

...

Summary

DexNP Eye Drop

Vehicle Eye Drop

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term DexNP Eye Drop Vehicle Eye Drop

Mean Change in Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) Best-corrected Visual Acuity (BCVA)

The primary efficacy endpoint was summarized by treatment group using descriptive statistics, including 70%, 90% and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Change from baseline to Week 12 is also summarised by treatment group. The primary analysis of the primary endpoint employed a linear model with change from baseline ETDRS BCVA letters as the response, baseline ETDRS BCVA letters as a covariate, and treatment as a main effect factor, using the ITT population and with multiple imputation pattern mixture model techniques used to impute missing data.

DexNP Eye Drop

2.62
ETDRS BCVA Letters (Least Squares Mean)
70% Confidence Interval: 1.831 to 3.403

Vehicle Eye Drop

1.04
ETDRS BCVA Letters (Least Squares Mean)
70% Confidence Interval: -0.115 to 2.189

Total

144
Participants

Age, Continuous

64.4
years (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 9.67

Race (NIH/OMB)

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

DexNP Eye Drop

Vehicle Eye Drop