Title: A New Drug to Treat Myopia
1A New Drug to Treat Myopia
- R. Michael Siatkowski, MD
- Professor of Ophthalmology
- Dean A. McGee Eye Institute
- University of Oklahoma
- Oklahoma City, OK
2Disclosure
- I served as a consultant to Valley Forge
Pharmaceuticals from 2001-2005.
3A Global Disease80M Children Suffer from Myopia
Europe 9.6Mil
U.S. 7.1Mil
Asia 57.6Mil
Latin America 5.7Mil
4Prevalence of Adult Myopiaby Country
5Earlier Onset Leads to Higher Levels of Myopia
Source Mäntyjärvi et al (1985) J Ped Oph Strab
22(2)71-75.
6Why Treat (Prevent) Myopia?
- Medical issues
- retinal detachment
- myopic retinal degeneration
- glaucoma
- Quality of life issues
- school
- athletics
- convenience
7Myopic Retinopathy Increases with Higher Myopia
- Source Vongphanet et al. (2002) Ophthalmol
109704-711
8Retinal Detachment Risk is Elevated with Low and
Moderate Myopia
Source Eye Disease Case-Control Study Group
(1993) Am J Epidem 137749-757.
Ogawa and Tanaka (1998) Jpn J Ophthalmol
32310-315.
9Prior Studies
- Optical treatments
- Contact lenses
- Bifocal lenses with lines
- Progressive addition bifocals (no lines)
- NOT EFFECTIVE
- Pharmacologic agents
- Only Atropine shown to be effective
10Complications of Atropine
- Cycloplegia (blurred vision)
- Pupillary dilation (photophobia)
- Retinal/lens phototoxicity
- Poor compliance
11Pirenzepine (PIR)
- Atropine-like drug
- Works on M1 and M3 receptors like atropine
- More selective for M1 receptors than atropine
- 15X less sensitive for M3 receptors than atropine
- Less mydriasis (pupil dilation)
- Less cycloplegia (blurred vision)
12Pirenzepine
- Used in Europe for peptic ulcer disease since
1977 - 400 million patient-days experience
- Good safety profile, including in children
- Use declined after H2-antagonists
introduced--never marketed in US - Shown by Stone et al to decrease myopia in chicks
13Phase II US Trial
- 8-12 years of age
- -0.75 to -4.00 D myopia
- Randomized 21 PIRPLACEBO
- n174
- 2-year data for n84
- No bifocals allowed
14U.S. 2-Year Cohort Demographic and Baseline
Characteristics
PIR 205 - A
15Phase II Clinical ProgramU.S. Year 2 Results
Spherical Equivalent Change from
Baseline Siatkowski et al, Journal of AAPOS
12232, 2008
.
.26
Plt 0.001
.58
p.008
.53
.99
16Cycloplegic autorefraction Proportion of
patients with criterion progression at 12
months Siatkowski et al, Arch Ophthalmol
1221667, 2004
17Phase II Clinical ProgramU.S. Year 2
ResultsProportion of Patients with Progression
at 2 YearsSiatkowski et al, Journal of AAPOS
12232, 2008
68
43
37
22
18Adverse Events
- Ocular
- 4 dropout from dilation or decreased near vision
in PIR group in year one - 2 dropout in year two
- 0 in PLACEBO group
- Mean pupillary dilation at 60 min
- Atropine pupils fixed and dilated at 7 mm
- PIR 1.5 mm
- PLACEBO 0.2 mm
- p lt 0.001
- Pupils remain reactive
19Pirenzepine Ophthalmic Gel Effects Are Confined
to the Eye
- Plasma levels lt 1 ng/ml with pirenzepine solution
applied topically - No systemic side effects
- Phase II dosing continued up to four years with
pirenzepine ophthalmic gel in children.
20Asian PIR study
- Tan et al, Ophthalmology 11284, 2005
- One year effects similar to US
- 2 year effect not yet published but continues as
in US data
21Two Times (2X) Treatment Effect Seen in Sub-group
- Children lt 9 years old
- Greater than 2.2 D myopia
22Summary
- PIRENZEPINE 2 gel significantly retards
pediatric myopic progression over 2 years - acceptable safety profile
- contrary to accommodative pathogenesis of myopia
- retina, sclera possible sites
23Future questions
- Best age to initiate treatment?
- Best refractive error to initiate treatment?
- How long to treat?
- Is there a rebound effect when stopped?
- Other delivery systems
- Sustained release agents in contact lenses?