4.6 Review

An update on long-acting therapies in chronic sight-threatening eye diseases of the posterior segment: AMD, DMO, RVO, uveitis and glaucoma

Journal

EYE
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 1154-1167

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41433-021-01766-w

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Funding

  1. Allergan International plc, Dublin, Ireland
  2. Allergan International

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In real-world settings, suboptimal compliance with frequent treatments and assessments can lead to undertreatment of eye diseases and pose a risk to vision. Longer-acting therapies that reduce the burden of treatment interventions are needed. Several longer-acting interventions for various eye diseases have been developed or are in late-phase development. This review provides an overview of these interventions and discusses the potential use of artificial intelligence to tailor treatment efficacy and reduce treatment burden.
In the real-world setting, there is suboptimal compliance with treatments that require frequent administration and assessment visits. This undertreatment frequently has negative consequences in eye disease and carries a real risk to vision. For example, patients with glaucoma risk progression of visual loss even with a small number of missed doses, and patients with neovascular age-related degeneration (nAMD) who fail to attend a bi-monthly clinic appointment to receive an intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) drug injections may lose the initial vision gains in vision. Protracted regular treatment schedules represent a high burden not only for patients and families, but also healthcare professionals, systems, and ultimately society too. There has been a clear need for longer-acting therapies that reduce the frequency, and therefore the burden, of treatment interventions. Several longer-acting interventions for nAMD, diabetic macular oedema, retinal vein occlusion, uveitis and glaucoma have either been developed or are in late-phase development, some of which employ novel mechanisms of actions, and all of which of promise longer (>= 3 month) treatment intervals. This review delivers an overview of anti-VEGF agents with longer durations of action, DARPins, bispecific anti-VEGF/Ang2 therapies, anti-PDGF and anti-integrin therapy, Rho-kinase inhibitors, the Port Delivery System, steroids, gene therapy for retina and uveitis, and for glaucoma, ROCK inhibitors, implants and plugs, and SLT laser and MIGS. The review also refers to the potential of artificial intelligence to tailor treatment efficacy with a resulting reduction in treatment burden.

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