Abstract

ObjectivesThis study evaluated the safety of topical lipoic acid choline ester (UNR844, 1.5%) ophthalmic solution and its efficacy in improving distance-corrected near visual acuity (DCNVA) in subjects with presbyopia.Subjects and methodsThis was a prospective, randomized, double-masked, and multicentre clinical trial. Subjects with a diagnosis of presbyopia (n = 75) were randomized 2:1 to UNR844 or placebo. On days 1–7, all subjects were dosed unilaterally (twice a day, b.i.d.) in their non-dominant eye to ensure safety and tolerability prior to days 8–91 when dosing was changed to bilateral (b.i.d.). Clinical assessments, including DCNVA and adverse events (AEs), were recorded at each study visit. Patients who completed the study were recruited into a non-interventional follow-up study that monitored them until 7 months after their final UNR844 exposure. The primary endpoints were safety and the mean change in DCNVA from baseline in the study eye.ResultsUNR844 administration (n = 50) produced no safety concerns and was well-tolerated, with no clinically-relevant changes in best-corrected distance visual acuity, pupil size, intraocular pressure, or discontinuations due to adverse events. DCNVA improved in the study eye in the UNR844 group compared to placebo during the 91 days of treatment [UNR844 vs. placebo, mean change in LogMAR (SD); −0.159 (0.120) vs. −0.079 (0.116)]. Bilateral DCNVA improved, with 53.1% UNR844 vs. 21.7% placebo subjects gaining ≥10 letters. Improvements in DCNVA were sustained at 5 and 7 months after UNR844 dosing ceased.ConclusionsThese results support further development of UNR844 ophthalmic solution for the treatment of presbyopia.

Highlights

  • Some data from this study were submitted as an abstract and presented at ESCRS, October 7–11, 2017, Lisbon, Portugal

  • Lipoic acid (LA) is taken up into lens fiber cells where it is metabolized by oxidoreductases to the active species, dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA), which reduces disulfide bonds between lens proteins, putatively improving the dynamic refractive power of the lens during accommodation and improving near visual acuity [20]

  • Baseline demographics were well-balanced between the UNR844 treated groups and placebo in the overall and distance-corrected near visual acuity (DCNVA) Better than 20/80 DCNVA 20/80 or worse (n = 50)

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Summary

Introduction

Some data from this study were submitted as an abstract and presented at ESCRS, October 7–11, 2017, Lisbon, Portugal. LA is taken up into lens fiber cells where it is metabolized by oxidoreductases to the active species, dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA), which reduces disulfide bonds between lens proteins, putatively improving the dynamic refractive power of the lens during accommodation and improving near visual acuity [20]. In this multicentre, Phase 1/2 study, the aim was to investigate the safety and efficacy of UNR844 in improving distance-corrected near visual acuity (DCNVA) in subjects with presbyopia

Methods
Study participants
Study design
Results
Discussion
Compliance with ethical standards

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