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Clinical Trial Summary

COLLIDE is a multi-center, open-label, 1:1 randomized study looking at the effects of aflibercept (AFL; 2.0mg) plus OZURDEX (DEX; 0.7mg) implant combination therapy versus DEX monotherapy in phakic or pseudophakic eyes with center-involved DME that have demonstrated prior incomplete response to 3-6 anti-VEGF treatment in 3-9 months. The primary outcome will be 24 week central subfield thickness. Secondary outcomes include the change in ETDRS BCVA letters, number of re-injections and re-injection interval, proportion of eyes with 15- and 10- ETDRS letter gained/lost, proportion of eyes with PDR as per Optos color and FA at the study completion (24+/- 2 weeks) and OCT and OCT angiography biomarkers.


Clinical Trial Description

Diabetic macular edema (DME) is a common cause of vision loss in patients with diabetes. The pathophysiology of DME is complex and likely multifactorial, where some of the most important features include the accumulation of advanced glycation end products, reactive oxygen species, protein kinase C and diacylglyceride activation, up-regulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and up-regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Additionally, inflammation has also been identified as an important etiological factor because breakdown of the retinal pigment epithelium - a physiologic barrier to fluid flow from the choriocapillaris and active retinal fluid pump, has been linked to increased levels of pro-inflammatory mediators including VEGF and processes that support leukostasis.

In Canada, LUCENTIS® (0.5 mg ranibizumab or RBZ, an anti-neovascular VEGF-A inhibitor, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Canada Inc.) was the first approved medical treatment for DME. Health Canada's decision for regulatory approval of RBZ (0.5 mg) for treatment of DME was based on 12-month results from the RESOLVE (Phase II trial investigating RBZ (0.3 mg or 0.5 mg) vs. sham injection) and RESTORE (Phase IIIb trial investigating RBZ (0.5 mg) + sham laser or RBZ (0.5 mg) + laser vs. laser + sham injection) trials. In the RESOLVE trial, pooled RBZ treatment arms resulted in significant and continuous improvement compared to sham treatment in both BCVA (mean improvement of 7.8 letters with RBZ treatment compared to a mean decline of 0.1 letters with sham treatment) and CRT (mean reduction of -194.2 µm with RBZ treatment vs. -48.4±153.4 µm with sham treatment). Similarly in the RESTORE trial, RBZ monotherapy and RBZ treatment with adjunctive laser yielded a statistically significantly greater mean average change in BCVA letter score compared to laser monotherapy through 12-months of study (+6.1 and +5.9 vs. +0.8 BCVA letters, respectively) along with a significantly greater improvement in CRT change from baseline vs. laser (-118.7 µm and -128.3 µm vs. -61.3 µm, respectively). Additionally, RBZ treatment arms in both RESOLVE and RESTORE demonstrated comparable safety with controls permitting conclusions that RBZ 0.5 mg is well-tolerated in the management of DME.

Diabetic Retinopathy Clinical Research Network (DRCR.net) published in 2015 their Protocol T: Comparison of RBZ with Eylea (Aflibercept or AFL, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals) and Avastin (Bevacizumab or BCZ, Roche) in DME. At 1 year, the patients treated with AFL had a statistically improved visual acuity of 13.3 letters as compared to BCZ (9.7 letters) and RBZ (11.2 letters). The same cohort of AFL treated DME had greater improvement on Ocular Coherence Tomography central subfield thickness with 169 micron change vs 101 um with BCZ and 147 um with RBZ. However, in all treatment arms, a large number of patients 46% required rescue laser therapy as per study protocol.

While anti-VEGF agents are a mainstay for the management of DME, a subgroup of eyes having partial or incomplete response to AVASTIN® (bevacizumab or BCZ), EYLEA® (intravitreal aflibercept injection or AFL) and RBZ exist.

RISE and RIDE, two phase III trials for registration of RBZ in the USA randomized DME patients on a basis of 1:1:1 to receive monthly 0.3 mg or 0.5 mg RBZ intravitreal treatments or sham injections over 24 months. Upon completion of the 24-month study (time point for primary efficacy outcome, namely the proportion of patients gaining ≥ 15 Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) letters in BCVA from baseline), patients within the sham arm were eligible to receive delayed monthly 0.5 mg RBZ treatments over the next 12 months. Although strong vision gains were observed in patients originally randomized to RBZ arms at month 24 and sustained through month 36, sham controls receiving delayed RBZ treatment had vision improvements to a lesser extent than those receiving continuous RBZ treatment throughout the 36 month study, thereby suggesting benefits with initiation of DME treatment early in the course of DME management.

In a prospective study comparing the efficacy of monthly BCZ (1.5 mg) vs. monthly RBZ (0.5 mg) in eyes with baseline center-involved DME > 300 µm, Nepomuceno and colleagues reported 59% and 37% of eyes had persistent DME (> 275 µm) by week 48. Moreover, 28% and 14% of BCZ- and RBZ-treated eyes qualified for rescue therapy, respectively.

Results from the phase 3 VIVID and VISTA trials demonstrated that 42% eyes with central involved DME treated with Eylea (Aflibercept) 2.0 mg administered either every 4 or 8 weeks (after 5 initial monthly doses) failed to achieve 2-lines of vision gain.

In the RESOLVE and RESTORE trials there were 39.2% and 59.7% of RBZ-treated eyes that respectively failed to achieve 2-lines of vision gain at 12 months of study, while in RISE and RIDE, 23% of patients had CRT >250 µm and 40% of patients failed to achieve a best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) ≥ 20/40 despite 2 years of monthly RBZ injections.

Adjunctive treatment regimens that offer ability to resolve DME and improve vision in eyes with incomplete response to anti-VEGF monotherapy will be of great value. Given that the treatment effects observed with delayed treatment in RISE and RIDE were less than that seen in the continuous (early) RBZ treatment arms, one may reason it is beneficial to readily identify eyes with incomplete response to anti-VEGF monotherapy to best allow functional vision improvement with an effective adjunctive treatment option.

Intravitreal corticosteroids may be useful in the treatment of DME because they block production of VEGF and other inflammatory mediators, inhibit leukostasis, and enhance the barrier function of vascular endothelial cell tight junctions. Off-label treatment with IVTA has been shown to be more effective than placebo in improving vision in patients with refractory DME. Sustained-release corticosteroids have been developed to reduce the need for frequent retreatments associated with anti-VEGF monotherapy regimens.

OZURDEX® (DEX implant; Allergan Inc. Irvine, CA, USA) is a sustained-release biodegradable implant approved for treatment of ME following central retinal vein occlusion, non-infectious uveitis affecting the posterior segment and pseudophakic DME in adult patients. DEX implant releases the corticosteroid dexamethasone, which possesses 5-6 times greater anti-inflammatory potency than triamcinolone, into the vitreous over a period of 6 months. In previous studies, DEX implant has demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of persistent DME, DME resistant to anti-VEGF treatment and DME in difficult-to-treat vitrectomized eyes. Recently, the results of two identical phase III, multi-center, international, masked, randomized, sham-controlled trials of DEX implants (0.35 mg and 0.7 mg) in DME demonstrated that an average of 4-5 DEX implant injections administered at ≥ 6-month intervals over 3 years provides rapid and sustained functional and anatomical improvements. Retreatment with the 0.7 mg DEX implant in phakic DME eyes was associated with significant 67.9% cataract-related adverse events and 59.2% cataract surgery rate vs. only 20.4% and 7.2% rates observed in sham-controls. These cataract-related adverse event rates are comparatively lower for a DEX implant than for other commonly used intravitreal corticosteroids. As such, a DEX implant may have a better benefit to risk safety profile. A meta-analysis on corticosteroid-induced IOP elevation for the three commonly used intravitreal corticosteroids including off-label KENALOG® (intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide or IVTA (4.0 mg), Bristol-Myers Squibb, Canada. Montreal, Quebec), DEX implant and RETISERT® (intravitreal fluocinolone acetonide or IFA (0.59 mg) non-biodegradable implant, Bausch & Lomb Canada Inc., Vaughan, Ontario) found the incidence of ocular hypertension to be lowest among eyes treated with DEX implant (15%) followed by IVTA (32%) and IFA (66%).

DRCR.net Protocol U studied the effect of adding Ozurdex to patients who had incomplete response to at least 3 anti-VEGF injections. The authors randomized 116 phakic and pseudophakic patients with DME to either Ozurdex plus RBZ or RBZ alone. Change in OCT subfoveal thickness was significantly different between both groups with 110 um reduction in the ozurdex arm vs 62 um in the monotherapy RBZ arm.

The present study seeks to compare the effects of a combination treatment regimen consisting of AFL (2.0 mg) + DEX implant vs. DEX implant monotherapy in phakic or pseudophakic eyes with center-involved DME deemed to have incomplete response to 3-6 prior anti-VEGF treatments.

It is hypothesized that phakic or pseudophakic center-involved DME eyes with incomplete response to 3-6 anti-VEGF injections (i.e., RBZ, BCZ or IAI) will show a greater reduction in central subfield thickness (CST) at 24 weeks when treated with a combination treatment regimen consisting of AFL (2.0 mg) and DEX implant (0.7 mg) vs. a monotherapy treatment regimen with DEX implant (0.7 mg). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03629210
Study type Interventional
Source North Toronto Eye Care Laser and Eye Specialists
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase Phase 2
Start date September 2019
Completion date May 2021

See also
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