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Safety and Effectiveness of the PXL Platinum 330 System With Riboflavin Solution for Refractory Corneal Ulcers

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase 2/3

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Overview

This study is being conducted to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of using the PXL Platinum 330 System with riboflavin solution for performing corneal collagen crosslinking (CXL) for the treatment of refractory corneal ulcers. The PXL Platinum 330 System is a combination product consisting of an ultraviolet-A (UV-A) 365 nm wavelength light source (PXL Platinum 330 Illumination System) and riboflavin (Peschke Riboflavin 0.25% Transepithelial Solution) administered in conjunction with the UV-A light as a photosensitizer.

The PXL Platinum 330 System is intended to induce corneal collagen CXL to improve the biomechanical properties of the cornea by strengthening the corneal tissue in the anterior stroma. Corneal collagen CXL is performed by pretreating the cornea with riboflavin 0.25% ophthalmic solution beginning 40 min before UV-A light exposure to saturate the corneal tissue with the riboflavin photosensitizer. The cornea is then irradiated with UV-A light (365 nm) at an irradiance of 18 mW/cm2 (5 seconds on, 5 seconds off) for 10 min. Exposure of the cornea to this UV-A light regimen after topical administration of riboflavin (0.25%) has been shown to induce CXL of the corneal collagen fibrils, with a resultant increase in tensile strength and diameter of the collagen fibrils. Clinically, CXL has been shown to stabilize the corneal curvature in eyes with progressive keratoconus, with no significant change in the refractive index of the cornea. Numerous reports and a few clinical trials have also shown benefit in aiding resolution of infective corneal ulcers.

Description

This is a prospective, 2-arm parallel-group, single-blind, randomized multicenter study to determine the safety and effectiveness of the PXL Platinum 330 System for performing CXL in eyes with refractory corneal ulcers. Subjects with a history of non-resolving infective corneal ulcers will be evaluated initially for suitability as a candidate for CXL. Subjects who are candidates for CXL will be asked to participate in this study and will undergo the required screening procedures to determine study eligibility. Informed consent will be obtained from each subject before performance of any required study procedures that are not part of the investigator's routine examination. After completing screening procedures, the diagnosis for each eligible eye will be confirmed. Subjects will be randomized to 1 of 2

groups
  1. Group 1: Standard-of-care therapy (anti fungal drops if there is clinical suspicion for fungus, fortified antibiotics if corneal culture is positive for a specific organism sensitive to a fortified antibiotic, and empiric antibiotic drops based on community prevalence if corneal culture is negative and there is no clinical suspicion for fungus)
  2. Group 2: Standard-of-care therapy + CXL

Eyes undergoing CXL will have topical anesthetic administered and then have topical riboflavin instilled onto the cornea every 2 min (or longer as needed to assure adequate corneal penetration), after which the cornea will be exposed to UV-A pulsed light 18 mW/cm2 for 10 min. Riboflavin instillation will continue every 2 min during CXL. The CXL procedures will be performed on an outpatient basis using the PXL Platinum 330 System (UV-A light source and riboflavin solution). All use of the PXL Platinum 330 System will be in accordance with this protocol and the general instructions provided by the manufacturer (PESCHKE) in the PXL Platinum 330 Illumination System Operator's Manual. All subjects will be evaluated at Screening/Baseline, Day 0 (Randomization/Treatment), Day 1, Day 3 ( +/- 1 day), Week 1 ( +/- 2 days), Week 2 ( +/- 2 days), Week 4 ( +/- 3 days), and Week 6 ( +/- 4 days) after treatment. Efficacy monitoring throughout the study will include observations at appropriate times for re-epithelialization, size of infection, and corneal culture results. Safety monitoring throughout the study will include observations at appropriate times for pain, IOP, BSCVA, corneal scar size, AEs, clinically significant findings on ophthalmic examination, dilated fundus examination, and slit lamp examination. After treatment, subjects will be followed at the treating physician's discretion.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. 18 years of age or older
  2. Central corneal ulcer or hypopyon, and/or failure to improve within 24 hours of initiating conventional antibiotic eyedrops (eg, quinolone, polymyxin/trimethoprim, erythromycin, or other non-fortified antibiotics) or failure to completely re-epithelialisation within 1 week of initiating conventional antibiotic drops
  3. Consent to a corneal culture for bacterial keratitis (suspected keratitis is defined as a corneal epithelial defect of any size with an infiltration of the underlying stroma)
  4. Signed written informed consent
  5. Willingness and ability to comply with schedule for follow-up visits
  6. Minimum corneal thickness >300 μm

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Presence of a perforated corneal ulcer
  2. Presence of a corneal ulcer that has produced a descemetocele
  3. Presence of a corneal ulcer deeper than 50% depth or 275 μm in the cornea
  4. Any active ocular infection other than the central corneal ulcer or hypopyon to be treated
  5. Suspicion of amoebic or viral keratitis requiring treatment with topical anti- amoebic or topical antiviral ophthalmic medications
  6. Previous ocular condition (other than refractive error) in the eye(s) to be treated that may predispose the eye(s) for future complications. This may include history of or active corneal disease (eg, herpes simplex, herpes zoster keratitis, recurrent erosion syndrome, acanthamoeba, etc.)
  7. Uncontrolled systemic disease, especially a collagen-vascular or rheumatologic condition that could contribute to the corneal condition
  8. Pregnancy (or plan to become pregnant) or lactation during the course of the study
  9. A known sensitivity to study medications

Study details

Keratitis, Corneal Ulcer

NCT05255016

Peschke GmbH

25 January 2024

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