4.4 Article

Real-World Effectiveness, Tolerability and Safety of Cyclosporine A 0.1% Cationic Emulsion in Severe Keratitis and Dry Eye Treatment

Journal

OPHTHALMOLOGY AND THERAPY
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 1101-1117

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s40123-022-00487-x

Keywords

Cyclosporine A 0; 1% cationic emulsion; Dry eye disease; Real-world evidence; Severe keratitis

Categories

Funding

  1. Santen SA, Switzerland - Santen

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The PERSPECTIVE study evaluated the effectiveness of cyclosporine A 0.1% cationic emulsion in controlling severe keratitis in adults with dry eye. The treatment showed significant reductions in dry eye signs and symptoms, with improvements seen at week 4 and maintained over 12 months. Treatment-related adverse events were mostly mild/moderate and resolved by month 12 in the majority of cases.
Introduction The PERSPECTIVE study evaluated, in routine clinical practice, the effectiveness, tolerability and safety of cyclosporine A (CsA) 0.1% cationic emulsion (CE) in controlling severe keratitis in adults with dry eye who remained insufficiently controlled despite artificial tear (AT) use. Methods A prospective, multicenter, observational study was conducted at 44 ophthalmology clinics across Finland, Germany, Norway, Sweden and the UK. Adults treated with ATs for severe keratitis and dry eye received CsA 0.1% CE therapy (1 drop in both eyes at bedtime) and were followed up at weeks 4, 12 and 24 and at month 12. Primary endpoint was mean [standard deviation (SD)] change from baseline in corneal fluorescein staining (CFS; Oxford Grade Scale) at month 12 following CsA 0.1% CE initiation. Secondary endpoints examined ocular sign and symptom severity and adverse events (AEs). Results The full analysis set included 472 adults (75.9% female). Mean (SD) age was 61.9 (15.41) years. Mean (SD) CFS score was significantly reduced from baseline [2.56 (1.10)] at month 12 [1.10 (SD 1.13); P < 0.0001]. CFS score reductions were statistically significant from week 4, with further incremental decreases reported at study visits through month 12 (P < 0.0001). Severity of eyelid and conjunctival erythema was significantly reduced from baseline at week 4 and maintained through month 12 (P < 0.001). Tear film breakup time increased significantly from baseline at all study visits through month 12 (P < 0.001). Ocular symptom severity was significantly reduced from baseline at all study visits through month 12 (P < 0.001). Overall, 101 treatment-related AEs were reported. Most were mild/moderate (83.6%) and resolved by month 12 (73.3%). Conclusions In routine clinical practice, CsA 0.1% CE provided statistically significant reductions in dry eye signs and symptoms. Improvements were seen at week 4 and maintained over 12 months. Treatment tolerability was good and consistent with previous CsA 0.1% CE clinical studies.

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