Global Search

Search articles, concepts, and chapters

Am J OphthalmolApril 201386 citations

Treatment of diabetic macular edema with a designed ankyrin repeat protein that binds vascular endothelial growth factor: a phase I/II study.

Campochiaro Peter A, Channa Roomasa, Berger Brian B, Heier Jeffrey S, Brown David M, Fiedler Ulrike, Hepp Julia, Stumpp Michael T


AI Summary

MP0112, a novel anti-VEGF drug, showed prolonged vision and edema improvement in DME patients, but initial formulations caused inflammation. Impurities were identified and removed for future trials.

Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate the safety and bioactivity of MP0112, a designed ankyrin repeat protein (DARPin) that specifically binds vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in patients with diabetic macular edema (DME). DARPins are a novel class of proteins selected for specific, high-affinity binding to a target protein.

Design

Phase I/II, open-label, multicenter dose-escalation trial.

Methods

After a single intravitreal injection of MP0112, the main outcomes were safety assessments, aqueous MP0112 levels, change in best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), and foveal thickness measured by optical coherence tomography. Six cohorts were planned, but only 3 were enrolled (0.04, 0.15, 0.4 mg), because a maximally tolerated dose of 1.0 mg was identified in a parallel age-related macular degeneration trial.

Results

Median aqueous concentration of MP0112 was 555 nM 1 week and >10 nM in 3 of 4 patients 12 weeks post injection of 0.4 mg. Median BCVA improvement at week 12 was 4, 6, and 10 letters in cohorts 1, 2, and 3. Ocular inflammation was observed in 11 patients (61%) and was severe in 1. High-resolution chromatography separated proinflammatory impurities from MP0112, resulting in a new formulation.

Conclusions

A single intraocular injection of 0.4 mg MP0112 resulted in levels above the half-maximal inhibitory concentration and neutralization of VEGF in aqueous humor for 8-12 weeks. Despite inflammation in several patients, there was prolonged edema reduction and improvement in vision in several patients. The source of the inflammation was eliminated from a new preparation that is being tested in an ongoing clinical trial.


MeSH Terms

AgedAged, 80 and overAnkyrin RepeatAqueous HumorBiological AvailabilityDiabetes Mellitus, Type 1Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2Diabetic RetinopathyEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayFemaleFovea CentralisHumansIntravitreal InjectionsMacular EdemaMaleMaximum Tolerated DoseMiddle AgedPeptidesProtein BindingTomography, Optical CoherenceVascular Endothelial Growth Factor AVisual Acuity

Is this article assigned to the wrong chapter(s)? Let us know.