Purpose: Results from a 6-month double-masked and a 6-month open-label study (SANSIKA) established the efficacy and safety of once-daily 0.1% cyclosporin A cationic emulsion (CsA CE) in severe keratitis due to dry eye disease (DED). This article presents results from the Post-SANSIKA study, a 24-month extension of SANSIKA assessing the sustained efficacy of CsA CE after treatment discontinuation. Methods: Time to relapse (corneal fluorescein staining [CFS] score ≥4 [modified Oxford scale]) was assessed after treatment discontinuation in patients from the SANSIKA study who had CFS improvement from a score of 4 to ≤2 after 6 or 12 months of treatment with CsA CE. Findings: Of 62 patients who achieved a CFS score ≤2 at the end of the SANSIKA study, 38 did not relapse and 24 (39%) relapsed during the 24-month period after CsA CE discontinuation; the latter (relapse) group comprised 35% of patients initially treated with CsA CE for 12 months in SANSIKA versus 47% of those treated for 6 months only. Patients spent the most time during the extension study at CFS scores of 1 or 2 (median duration of 8.5 weeks and 14.7 weeks per year, respectively), indicating marked improvement, and less time at scores of 3, 4, or 5 (median time, 2.0 weeks, 0 weeks, and 0 weeks per year). Of 23 patients eligible for safety analysis (ie, patients who received the study treatment at least once), 12 (52.2%) reported a total of 26 ocular adverse events (AEs). Among these, 5 ocular AEs, reported in 5 patients (21.7%), were considered related to study treatment: 3 events of mild instillation site pain in 3 patients (13.0%) and eye discharge and foreign body sensation, each reported in 1 patient (4.3%). Only 1 systemic AE (nasal congestion), reported in 1 patient (4.3%), was considered related to study treatment. None of the AEs led to treatment discontinuation. Implications: The majority of patients who discontinued CsA CE after experiencing DED improvement in the SANSIKA study did not experience a relapse in this 24-month follow-up study; these patients spent the most time at CFS scores consistent with marked improvement. CsA CE had a favorable safety/tolerability profile over 2 years. Treatment for up to 12 months with CsA CE provides sustained improvements in patients with severe keratitis due to DED. EudraCT registration no. 2012-002066-12.

Persistence of Efficacy of 0.1% Cyclosporin A Cationic Emulsion in Subjects with Severe Keratitis Due to Dry Eye Disease: A Nonrandomized, Open-label Extension of the SANSIKA Study

Leonardi A.
;
2018

Abstract

Purpose: Results from a 6-month double-masked and a 6-month open-label study (SANSIKA) established the efficacy and safety of once-daily 0.1% cyclosporin A cationic emulsion (CsA CE) in severe keratitis due to dry eye disease (DED). This article presents results from the Post-SANSIKA study, a 24-month extension of SANSIKA assessing the sustained efficacy of CsA CE after treatment discontinuation. Methods: Time to relapse (corneal fluorescein staining [CFS] score ≥4 [modified Oxford scale]) was assessed after treatment discontinuation in patients from the SANSIKA study who had CFS improvement from a score of 4 to ≤2 after 6 or 12 months of treatment with CsA CE. Findings: Of 62 patients who achieved a CFS score ≤2 at the end of the SANSIKA study, 38 did not relapse and 24 (39%) relapsed during the 24-month period after CsA CE discontinuation; the latter (relapse) group comprised 35% of patients initially treated with CsA CE for 12 months in SANSIKA versus 47% of those treated for 6 months only. Patients spent the most time during the extension study at CFS scores of 1 or 2 (median duration of 8.5 weeks and 14.7 weeks per year, respectively), indicating marked improvement, and less time at scores of 3, 4, or 5 (median time, 2.0 weeks, 0 weeks, and 0 weeks per year). Of 23 patients eligible for safety analysis (ie, patients who received the study treatment at least once), 12 (52.2%) reported a total of 26 ocular adverse events (AEs). Among these, 5 ocular AEs, reported in 5 patients (21.7%), were considered related to study treatment: 3 events of mild instillation site pain in 3 patients (13.0%) and eye discharge and foreign body sensation, each reported in 1 patient (4.3%). Only 1 systemic AE (nasal congestion), reported in 1 patient (4.3%), was considered related to study treatment. None of the AEs led to treatment discontinuation. Implications: The majority of patients who discontinued CsA CE after experiencing DED improvement in the SANSIKA study did not experience a relapse in this 24-month follow-up study; these patients spent the most time at CFS scores consistent with marked improvement. CsA CE had a favorable safety/tolerability profile over 2 years. Treatment for up to 12 months with CsA CE provides sustained improvements in patients with severe keratitis due to DED. EudraCT registration no. 2012-002066-12.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3327756
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