Bibliographic Details
Title: |
Efficacy and safety of 0.1% ciclosporin A cationic emulsion in dry eye disease: a pooled analysis of two double-masked, randomised, vehicle-controlled phase III clinical studies. |
Authors: |
Leonardi, Andrea, Messmer, Elisabeth M., Labetoulle, Marc, Amrane, Mourad, Garrigue, Jean-Sébastien, Ismail, Dahlia, Sainz-de-la-Maza, Maite, Figueiredo, Francisco C., Baudouin, Christophe |
Source: |
British Journal of Ophthalmology; Jan2019, Vol. 103 Issue 1, p125-131, 7p, 2 Charts, 3 Graphs |
Abstract: |
Background/aim To assess the treatment effect of 0.1% ciclosporin A cationic emulsion (CsA CE) versus vehicle on signs/symptoms of dry eye disease (DED) in various subgroups (moderate-to-severe DED/severe DED/ Sjögren's syndrome (SS)/SS with severe DED). Methods Pooled data were analysed from two similar phase III studies: SICCANOVE (moderate-to-severe DED) and SANSIKA (severe DED with severe keratitis). In both studies, patients aged ≥18 years received CsA CE 0.1% (n=395) or vehicle (n=339) once daily for 6 months. A composite responder efficacy endpoint (corneal fluorescein staining-Ocular Surface Disease Index (CFS-OSDI) at month 6) was used to evaluate the efficacy of CsA CE in alleviating signs/symptoms of DED (response defined as improvement of ≥2 grades in CFS and ≥30% in OSDI (baseline to month 6)). Human leucocyte antigen-DR (HLA-DR) conjunctival expression was used as a biomarker of ocular surface inflammation. Results CsA CE-treated patients were significantly more likely to be CFS-OSDI responders than vehicletreated patients in the overall (OR 1.66, 95% CI 1.11 to 2.50; P=0.015), severe DED (1.80, 1.04 to 3.19; P=0.038) and SS with severe DED (3.37, 1.20 to 11.19; P=0.030) populations. The difference was not significant for CsA CE versus vehicle for the overall Sjögren's population (OR 1.77, CI 0.89 to 3.66; P=0.109). CsA CE also significantly reduced median HLA-DR expression versus vehicle at 6 months (P=0.002). Conclusion Pooled phase III data indicate CsA CE produced significant improvement in signs/symptoms versus vehicle in patients with moderate-to-severe DED (especially in those with severe keratitis), including patients with SS with severe DED. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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Database: |
Complementary Index |