Business Wire02.08.18
Glaukos Corporation, an ophthalmic medical technology company focused on the development and commercialization of glaucoma products and procedures, announced that its Travoprost Intraocular Implant with the iDose delivery system continued to provide sustained reduction in intraocular pressure (IOP) in a 12-month interim cohort of patients in its U.S. Investigational New Drug (IND) Phase II clinical trial.
Implanted during a micro-invasive procedure, the iDose Travoprost is filled with a special formulation of travoprost, a prostaglandin analog used to reduce IOP, and designed to continuously elute therapeutic levels of the medication from within the eye for extended periods of time. When depleted, the iDose Travoprost can be removed and replaced in a similar, subsequent procedure.
The 154-patient, multi-center, randomized, double-blind Phase II trial was designed to evaluate two models of the iDose delivery system with two different travoprost elution rates, compared to topical timolol ophthalmic solution, 0.5 percent and with a primary efficacy endpoint of non-inferiority to topical timolol. The latest Phase II results are from an available interim cohort of 74 patients, 49 of whom have been implanted with one of the iDose Travoprost implant models, with 25 patients in the timolol comparator group. Average IOP reductions observed in this cohort of implant patients during the first 12 months shows that iDose Travoprost achieved an approximate 30 percent reduction in mean IOP vs. baseline IOP. In addition, the mean number of glaucoma medications ranged from 0.54 to 0.56 at 12 months in the fast and slow iDose Travoprost elution implant groups, respectively, compared to 0.72 mean medications in the timolol group. The most-recent Phase II data also continued to reveal a favorable safety profile for iDose Travoprost, with no adverse events of hyperemia reported to date in either elution group.
Glaukos also announced that the company conducted a productive End-of-Phase II Meeting with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in late 2017 and is currently making preparations to initiate a Phase III IND clinical trial in the first half of 2018. The design of the prospective, randomized, double-blind Phase III iDose Travoprost trial will be similar to the Phase II trial and will enroll approximately 1,000 ocular hypertensive or open-angle glaucoma subjects at clinical sites in the United States and various international locations.
“These latest Phase II results further underscore the potential of iDose Travoprost to provide many months of sustained glaucoma pharmaceutical therapy and tackle the significant problem of patient non-adherence to topical medication regimens,” said Thomas Burns, Glaukos president and CEO. “We are pleased to be working cooperatively with the FDA as we prepare for the Phase III trial, which will mark another critical step forward in the advancement of our product pipeline designed to transform glaucoma therapy.”
In addition, the company has begun the processes to seek regulatory approvals for the iDose Travoprost in European markets and in Japan. This most recent announcement is the latest in a series of recent Glaukos pipeline milestone achievements, which also included:
Glaucoma is characterized by progressive, irreversible and largely asymptomatic vision loss caused by optic nerve damage. There is no cure for the disease and reducing IOP is the only proven treatment. Based on analysis of population-based surveys, medical claims data and other statistics, the company estimates that there are approximately 5.4 million people in the United States with primary open-angle glaucoma, the most common form of the disease, and an additional 4.6 million people in the United States with ocular hypertension.
Glaukos pioneered Micro-Invasive Glaucoma Surgery, or MIGS, to revolutionize the traditional glaucoma treatment and management paradigm. Glaukos launched the iStent, its first MIGS device, in the United States in July 2012 and is leveraging its platform technology to build a comprehensive and proprietary portfolio of micro-scale injectable therapies designed to address the complete range of glaucoma disease states and progression. The company believes the iStent, measuring 1.0 mm long and 0.33 mm wide, is the smallest medical device ever approved by the FDA.
Implanted during a micro-invasive procedure, the iDose Travoprost is filled with a special formulation of travoprost, a prostaglandin analog used to reduce IOP, and designed to continuously elute therapeutic levels of the medication from within the eye for extended periods of time. When depleted, the iDose Travoprost can be removed and replaced in a similar, subsequent procedure.
The 154-patient, multi-center, randomized, double-blind Phase II trial was designed to evaluate two models of the iDose delivery system with two different travoprost elution rates, compared to topical timolol ophthalmic solution, 0.5 percent and with a primary efficacy endpoint of non-inferiority to topical timolol. The latest Phase II results are from an available interim cohort of 74 patients, 49 of whom have been implanted with one of the iDose Travoprost implant models, with 25 patients in the timolol comparator group. Average IOP reductions observed in this cohort of implant patients during the first 12 months shows that iDose Travoprost achieved an approximate 30 percent reduction in mean IOP vs. baseline IOP. In addition, the mean number of glaucoma medications ranged from 0.54 to 0.56 at 12 months in the fast and slow iDose Travoprost elution implant groups, respectively, compared to 0.72 mean medications in the timolol group. The most-recent Phase II data also continued to reveal a favorable safety profile for iDose Travoprost, with no adverse events of hyperemia reported to date in either elution group.
Glaukos also announced that the company conducted a productive End-of-Phase II Meeting with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in late 2017 and is currently making preparations to initiate a Phase III IND clinical trial in the first half of 2018. The design of the prospective, randomized, double-blind Phase III iDose Travoprost trial will be similar to the Phase II trial and will enroll approximately 1,000 ocular hypertensive or open-angle glaucoma subjects at clinical sites in the United States and various international locations.
“These latest Phase II results further underscore the potential of iDose Travoprost to provide many months of sustained glaucoma pharmaceutical therapy and tackle the significant problem of patient non-adherence to topical medication regimens,” said Thomas Burns, Glaukos president and CEO. “We are pleased to be working cooperatively with the FDA as we prepare for the Phase III trial, which will mark another critical step forward in the advancement of our product pipeline designed to transform glaucoma therapy.”
In addition, the company has begun the processes to seek regulatory approvals for the iDose Travoprost in European markets and in Japan. This most recent announcement is the latest in a series of recent Glaukos pipeline milestone achievements, which also included:
- Planned initiation of U.S. Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) pivotal clinical trial for the iStent SA Trabecular Micro-Bypass System, a standalone, two-stent procedure designed to reduce IOP in pseudophakic, mild-to-moderate open-angle glaucoma patients.
- Submission of the final clinical module of a Pre-Market Approval application to the FDA for the iStent inject Trabecular Micro-Bypass System, a two-stent procedure designed to reduce IOP in mild-to-moderate open-angle glaucoma patients undergoing cataract surgery.
- Submission of an IDE application to the FDA, seeking authorization to study the iStent infinite Trabecular Micro-Bypass System, a standalone, three-stent procedure, in reducing IOP in refractory open-angle glaucoma patients or those with uncontrolled IOP on maximally tolerated medical therapy.
Glaucoma is characterized by progressive, irreversible and largely asymptomatic vision loss caused by optic nerve damage. There is no cure for the disease and reducing IOP is the only proven treatment. Based on analysis of population-based surveys, medical claims data and other statistics, the company estimates that there are approximately 5.4 million people in the United States with primary open-angle glaucoma, the most common form of the disease, and an additional 4.6 million people in the United States with ocular hypertension.
Glaukos pioneered Micro-Invasive Glaucoma Surgery, or MIGS, to revolutionize the traditional glaucoma treatment and management paradigm. Glaukos launched the iStent, its first MIGS device, in the United States in July 2012 and is leveraging its platform technology to build a comprehensive and proprietary portfolio of micro-scale injectable therapies designed to address the complete range of glaucoma disease states and progression. The company believes the iStent, measuring 1.0 mm long and 0.33 mm wide, is the smallest medical device ever approved by the FDA.