60
Views
19
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Case Series

A randomized crossover study comparing tafluprost 0.005% with travoprost 0.004% in patients with normal-tension glaucoma

, , , , &
Pages 1579-1584 | Published online: 25 Sep 2012

Abstract

Purpose:

We compared the intraocular pressure (IOP)-lowering effect of tafluprost 0.0015% once daily with travoprost 0.004% once daily in Japanese patients with normal-tension glaucoma (NTG).

Methods:

One hundred sixteen patients with NTG were randomized to use tafluprost 0.0015% or travoprost 0.004% once daily for 12 weeks, followed by a washout period of 4 weeks between switching medications. IOP was measured at baseline and 4, 8, and 12 weeks of each treatment period.

Results:

Ninety patients completed both treatment periods and had IOP data available for evaluation. In both groups, a significant decrease in IOP was observed for all measurement points compared with baseline values (P < 0.0001). There was no significant difference in IOP at each time point between the two groups. Both drugs were effective (defined as more than 10% IOP reduction) in 39 (43%) of 90 patients; only tafluprost was effective in 26 (29%) patients, and only travoprost was effective in 17 (19%) patients. Eight (9%) patients were nonresponders to both drugs.

Conclusions:

Tafluprost and travoprost were equally effective in lowering IOP in patients with normal-tension glaucoma. However, patients with normal-tension glaucoma may vary in response to each medication.

View correction statement:
Corrigendum

Introduction

Elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is a risk factor for the development and progression of glaucoma.Citation1,Citation2 However, in cases of normal-tension glaucoma (NTG), glaucomatous damage may advance gradually even if IOP remains within the normal range.Citation1,Citation2 However, IOP remains part of the pathogenesis of NTG, and lowering IOP is effective for reducing the progression of glaucomatous damage.

A survey of the prevalence of glaucoma in Japanese population was conducted from 2000 to 2001 in Tajimi city. The report revealed that the prevalence of NTG was 3.6%, which is much higher than the prevalence of primary open angle glaucoma with high IOP levels (>21 mmHg) at 0.3%. IOP of 92% of patients with primary open angle glaucoma was 21 mmHg or less without glaucoma medications and average IOP in primary open angle glaucoma patients was 15.2–15.4 mmHg, which was within the normal IOP range in the Japanese population.Citation3 However, IOP in these patients was significantly higher than that of nonglaucomatous subjects. Therefore, it is very important to reduce IOP in patients with NTG in Japan.

Recently, several prostaglandin analogues (PGs) have been developed as IOP-lowering agents. They play important roles in the management of glaucoma because of their potent IOP-lowering activity. Studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of PGs in lowering IOP in patients with NTG.Citation4Citation14 However, it has been reported that the IOP-lowering effect may differ among different PGs, and the presence of responders and nonresponders to the same type of drug has been reported.Citation15Citation18 Thus, many questions remain regarding the effects of PGs in the management of NTG.

In this study, we conducted a randomized crossover study to compare the IOP-lowering effect of tafluprost and travoprost in patients with NTG to investigate the percentage and characteristics of responders and nonresponders to these two drugs.

Subjects and methods

This was a prospective, randomized, open-label, multicenter crossover study carried out at six centers during the period from February 1, 2009 to April 30, 2010. The study followed the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki and received approval from the ethics committee of each participating facility. Written informed consent was obtained from each patient before the start of the study. This study was registered at University hospital Medical Information Network (UMIN): 000001829.

Patients with NTG satisfying all of the following inclusion criteria were eligible for the study: (1) age over 20 years, (2) corrected visual acuity of over 0.1, (3) no history of previous treatment of glaucoma or completion of at least a 4-week washout period after previous therapy for glaucoma, (4) reproducible visual field assessment with a fixation loss of less than 20% and false-positive and false-negative rates of less than 30% if possible with Swedish interactive thresholding algorithm (SITA) standard 24-2 measured with a Humphrey’s perimeter (model 750; Humphrey Instruments, San Leandro, CA). The exclusion criteria were: (1) patients with exfoliation syndrome, (2) patients with diabetic retinopathy (Fukuda’s class AII or severer),Citation19 (3) patients with visual field defects with mean deviation ≤ −15 dB, (4) patients with spherical ≤ −6 D (diopter), (5) patients with a history of ocular trauma, ocular inflammatory disease, intraocular surgery, or laser trabeculoplasty, (6) patients with conjunctivitis, dry eye, or periocular cutaneous diseases possibly affecting the results of the investigation, (7) currently pregnant or nursing women, or women considering pregnancy, (8) patients with a history of noncompliance, (9) patients who participated in another therapeutic drug study within one month, and (10) a history of cerebrovascular and hepatic disease.

The diagnosis of NTG was made if all of the following criteria were satisfied: (1) presence of glaucomatous optic disc neuropathy (a cup/disc ratio of ≥0.7, or the presence of notching) accompanied by corresponding visual field defects, (2) a threshold examination of SITA 24-2 showing a glaucoma hemifield test (GHT) “outside normal limits,” and a cluster of three contiguous points on the pattern deviation plot depressed at P < 5% level (occurring in age-matched normal subjects) not crossing the horizontal meridian were compatible with glaucoma, (3) assessed as an open angle on gonioscopy, and (4) IOP < 21 mmHg in at least three pre-study visits for untreated patients, or IOP < 21 mmHg at baseline visits after washing out of the previous therapy.

In cases of bilateral NTG, the eye with the higher IOP at the end of the washout period was adopted for evaluation of the test drug. In cases of bilateral NTG with equal IOP, the right eye was tested. The patients enrolled in the study were divided at random into two groups, a group treated with tafluprost ophthalmic solution 0.0015% (TAPROS®, Santen Pharmaceutical Co, Ltd, Osaka, Japan) and a group treated with travoprost ophthalmic solution 0.004% (Travatan®Z; Alcon Laboratories Inc, Fort Worth, TX). The IOP at the start of the study served as the baseline IOP. IOP measurements were carried out at 4, 8, and 12 weeks. Treatment with each drug was suspended for 4 weeks (washout period), and the IOP at the end of the washout period served as the baseline IOP for the second treatment period. During the second treatment period, drugs were administered in a crossover fashion to the two groups, and measurements and assessments were identical to those conducted during the first treatment period.

A-scan biometry (US-800; Nidek Co, Ltd, Tokyo, Japan) and pachymeter (SP-2000; Topcon, Tokyo, Japan) were used to measure axial length and central corneal thickness, respectively. Three sessions of IOP were measured at 9:00 am using a Goldman applanation tonometer (Haag-Streit, Bern, Switzerland). If the difference in the IOP between any two of the three sessions of measurement was greater than 3 mmHg, the median value was used; if the difference was less than 3 mmHg, the mean value was used.

Statistical analysis

Prior to the study, it was estimated that 90 patients should be randomized among both treatment groups in order to detect a difference of 1.2 mmHg between groups at a significance level of 0.05, a power of 80%, and given a standard deviation of 2.0 mmHg for IOP change from baseline. To allow for withdrawal, over 100 patients were enrolled in this study. Baseline and post-treatment values were compared using one-way repeated-measures analysis of variance test for each treatment group. The difference in IOP between the two groups was assessed using unpaired t-test. Pearson’s χ2-square test was used for inter-group comparison of the percentage of patients in whom each goal of IOP reduction was achieved. Correlation between baseline IOP and percent IOP reduction was analyzed using polynominal regression analysis. P < 0.05 (two-tailed) was regarded as statistically significant. Statistical analysis was performed using the Statistical Analysis System (SAS) software, version 8 (SAS Institute Inc, Japan).

Results

A total of 116 patients (116 test eyes) were enrolled in this study. Ten patients dropped out of the study prematurely due to change of residence and discontinued their visits. Three patients treated with travoprost were discontinued because they developed conjunctival hyperemia and ocular irritation. Two patients were excluded from analysis due to failure to comply with dosing instructions. One patient was excluded because he underwent cataract surgery. After excluding these 16 cases, 90 patients treated with tafluprost and travoprost in a crossover fashion were included in the final analysis. During Treatment Period I, 48 patients were treated with tafluprost and 42 patients were treated with travoprost.

Demographic features are summarized in . All patients were Japanese. The mean age was 69.4 ± 8.8 years (range: 50–86 years). There were 23 males and 67 females. shows the IOP and the percent IOP reduction from baseline at each point of evaluation. There was no significant difference in the baseline IOP between the tafluprost and the travoprost groups (P = 0.811). In both groups, significant decreases in IOP were observed at each time-point of measurement compared with baseline (P < 0.0001). However, there were no significant differences in the IOP and the percent IOP reduction at each time points between the two groups.

Table 1 Patient characteristics

Table 2 The mean intraocular pressure (IOP) at each time point and percent reduction (%) in mean IOP from baseline IOP

The IOP and percent IOP reduction at each time-point of measurement during tafluprost or travoprost treatment were compared between patients with a baseline IOP of 15 mmHg or higher (the highteens group) and those with the baseline IOP of less than 15 mmHg (the lowteens group) (). In the high-teens group and the low-teens group, a significant decrease of the IOP was observed at each time point of measurement compared with the baseline in the tafluprost and the travoprost groups (P < 0.0001); however, there was no significant difference in the IOP and the percent IOP reduction from baseline IOP at any time-point between tafluprost and travoprost group.

Table 3 The mean intraocular pressure (IOP) and percent reduction (%) from the baseline IOP at each time point in highteens group and lowteens group among study subjects who completed the trial

IOP response rates are shown in . In total, there was no significant difference between the two groups. In the high-teens group, there was no significant difference between the two groups (P = 0.277). However, in the low-teens group, an IOP response rate greater than 10% from baseline was achieved by 22 (66.7%) patients and 19 (52.8%) patients in the tafluprost group and travoprost group, respectively. There was a significant difference between the two groups (P = 0.045).

Table 4 The number of subjects who experienced a percent reduction from the baseline IOP in patients with normal tension glaucoma and subgroups

shows the relationship between percent IOP reduction of tafluprost and that of travoprost in individual patients. When cases showing a 10% or more IOP reduction at 12 weeks from the baseline IOP were defined as a responder, 39 (43%) of the 90 patients were responders to both drugs, 26 patients (29%) were responders only to tafluprost, 17 patients (19%) were responders only to travoprost, and 8 patients (9%) were nonresponders to both drugs. shows the correlation between baseline IOP and percent IOP reduction in the tafluprost group and the travoprost group. In the tafluprost group, baseline IOP was not significantly correlated with percent IOP reduction (P = 0.381, r = 0.270). In the travoprost group, however, elevation of baseline IOP was associated with a significant decrease in percent reduction of IOP (P = 0.0068, r = 0.388).

Figure 1 (A) The relationship between percent reductions of intraocular pressure (IOP) by tafluprost and travoprost. Dashed line represents a border of 10% IOP reduction. (B) Polynomial regression analysis shows the relationship between baseline IOP and percent IOP reduction from baseline IOP.

Abbreviation: IOP, intraocular pressure.
Figure 1 (A) The relationship between percent reductions of intraocular pressure (IOP) by tafluprost and travoprost. Dashed line represents a border of 10% IOP reduction. (B) Polynomial regression analysis shows the relationship between baseline IOP and percent IOP reduction from baseline IOP.

Discussion

Numerous reports have demonstrated the effectiveness of PGs in the treatment of NTG.Citation3Citation14 According to a recent meta-analysis from NTG cases, treatment with latanoprost resulted in a peak percent IOP reduction of 17%–24% (mean: 20%) relative to baseline IOP, and treatment with bimatoprost also yielded favorable results, ie, a peak percent IOP reduction of 16%–25% (mean: 21%) was reported.Citation20 In regard to the IOP-lowering effect of tafluprost and travoprost in patients with NTG, several reports showed favorable results, with a reduction in the IOP by 16%–25%.Citation11Citation14 These previous results suggest that favorable IOP-lowering effects may also be expected of PGs in cases of NTG. Our results show that percent IOP reduction at the last point of evaluation was 14.3% in the tafluprost group and 14.0% in the travoprost group and the percentage of the patients in whom a 20% or more IOP reduction achieved was 36.7% in the tafluprost group and 35.3% in the travoprost group. These two drugs are effective for lowering IOP in Japanese patients with NTG, without any significant difference in efficacy between the two drugs. The study also showed that the correlation between baseline IOP and percent IOP reduction differs between drugs. The IOP lowering effect of tafluprost was not correlated with baseline IOP. This result suggests that tafluprost is effective in any baseline IOP. Interestingly, tafluprost and travoprost were effective for lowering IOP even in the low-teens group. It has been reported that the IOP-lowering effect may differ among different PGs; the presence of both responders and nonresponders to the same type of drug has been reported. Camras and HedmanCitation17 and Rossetti et alCitation18 reported that 4.1% of subjects were nonresponders, which were defined as patients who did not experience a decrease in IOP of at least 15% from the baseline IOP. However, no studies have examined the response of one PG nonresponder to other PGs. When patients in whom 10% or more reduction of the IOP from the baseline were defined as responders, 43% of all patients were rated as responders to both tafluprost and travoprost. However, approximately 19% and 29% of patients responded only to travoprost or to tafluprost, respectively (). A more surprising finding was that there were two patients (2%) whose IOP reduction was 30% or more in tafluprost and 10% or less in travoprost. These results indicate that there are some cases whose susceptibility differs considerably between PGs. There were many reports stating that the absence of any IOP-lowering effect is considered a class effect, so that the current practice is to use another therapeutic class rather than use another PG. If there are differences in the response to PGs in the same patients all PGs should be tested before declaring this class ineffective and select the most effective PGs.

We speculate that the difference to response in each prostaglandin is related to several factors, such as the difference in corneal permeability,Citation21 intraocular drug metabolism,Citation22 variety in the expressed FP-receptor, Citation23 or a difference in the composition of the functional FP-receptor.Citation24 Currently, it is difficult to predict the susceptibility to individual drugs in advance. It would be desirable to develop a screening method for identification of the optimum prostaglandin analogue for individual cases.

There are several limitations to this study. The study involved open-labeled treatment to observers. Potential limitations include the relatively short treatment periods of 12 weeks and lack of diurnal variation.

In summary, this study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of tafluprost and travoprost in patients with NTG, and revealed that both drugs had a comparative effect on lowering IOP. However, the susceptibility to the two drugs differed in approximately 50% of patients with NTG. This difference must be considered when using these drugs for treating NTG.

Disclosure

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. All authors have no conflict of interest.

References

  • The Collaborative Normal-Tension Glaucoma Study GroupThe effectiveness of intraocular pressure reduction in the treatment of normal-tension glaucomaAm J Ophthalmol19981264985059780094
  • The Collaborative Normal-Tension Glaucoma Study GroupComparison of glaucomatous progression between untreated patients with normal-tension glaucoma and patients with therapeutically reduced intraocular pressuresAm J Ophthalmol19981264874979780093
  • IwaseASuzukiYAraieMThe prevalence of primary open-angle glaucoma in JapaneseOphthalmology20041111641164815350316
  • RuloAHGreveELGeijssenHCHoyngPFJReduction of intraocular pressure with treatment of latanoprost once daily in patients with normal-pressure glaucomaOphthalmology1996103127612828764799
  • DranceSMCrichtonAMillsRPComparison of the effect of latanoprost 0.005% and timolol 0.5% on the calculated ocular perfusion pressure in patients with normal-tension glaucomaAm J Ophthalmol19981255855929625541
  • HarrisAMigliardiRRechtmanEColeCNYeeABGarzoziHJComparative analysis of the effects of dorzolamide and latanoprost on ocular hemodynamics in normal tension glaucoma patientsEur J Ophthalmol200313243112635671
  • TomitaGAraieMKitazawaYTsukaharaSA three-year prospective, randomized and open comparison between latanoprost and timolol in Japanese normal-tension glaucoma patientsEye20041898498915037889
  • DirksMSNoeckerRJEarlMRohSSilversteinSMWilliamsRDA 3-month clinical trial comparing the IOP-lowering efficacy of bimatoprost and latanoprost in patients with normal-tension glaucomaAdv Ther20062338539416912020
  • KiuchiTMotoyamaYOshikaTInfluence of ocular hypotensive eyedrops on intraocular pressure fluctuation with postural change in eyes with normal-tension glaucomaAm J Ophthalmol200714369369517386282
  • QuarantaLPizzolanteTRivaIHaidichA-BKonstasAGPStewartWCTwenty-four-hour intraocular pressure and blood pressure levels with bimatoprost versus latanoprost in patients with normal-tension glaucomaBr J Ophthalmol2008921227123118586898
  • SuhMHParkKHKimDMEffect of travoprost on intraocular pressure during 12 months of treatment for normal-tension glaucomaJpn J Ophthalmol200953182319184304
  • KuwayamaYKomemusiSIntraocular pressure lowering effect of 0.0015% tafluprost as compared to placebo in patients with normal tension glaucoma: Randomized, double-blind, multicenter. Phase III studyJ Jpn Ophthalmol Soc2010114436443
  • NomuraYNakakuraSMoriwakiMTakahashiYShirakiKEffect of travoprost on 24-hour intraocular pressure in normal tension glaucomaClin Ophthalmol20103064364720689776
  • AngGSKerseyJPShepstoneLBroadwayDCThe effect of travoprost on daytime intraocular pressure in normal tension glaucoma: a randomized controlled trialBr J Ophthalmol2008921129123318511540
  • AungTChewPTKYipC-CA randomized double-masked crossover study comparing latanoprost 0.005% with unoprostone 0.12% in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma and ocular hypertensionAm J Ophthalmol200113163664211336940
  • SchererWJA retrospective review of non-responders to latanoprostJ Ocular Pharmacol Ther200218287291
  • CamrasCBHedmanKUS Latanoprost Study GroupRate of response to latanoprost or timolol in patients with ocular hypertension or glaucomaJ Glaucoma20031246646914646680
  • RossettiLGandolfiSTraversoCAn evaluation of the rate of nonresponders to latanoprost therapyJ Glaucoma20061523824316778647
  • FukudaMClassification and treatment of diabetic retinopathyDiabetes Res Clin Pract199424SupplS171S1767859602
  • ChengJWCaiJPWeiRLMeta-analysis of medical intervention for normal tension glaucomaOphthalmology20091161243124919450880
  • HariharanSMinochaMMishraGPPalDKrishnaRMitraAKInteraction of ocular hypotensive agents (PGF2 alpha analogs-bimatoprost, latanoprost, and travoprost) with MDR efflux pumps on the rabbit corneaJ Ocul Pharmacol Ther20092548749820028257
  • OkitaRTOkitaJRProstaglandin-metabolizing enzymes during pregnancy: characterization of NAD(+)-dependent prostaglandin dehydrogenase, carbonyl reductase, and cytochrome P450-dependent prostaglandin omega-hydroxylaseCrit Rev Biochem Mol Biol19963121011268740524
  • SakuraiMHigashideTTakahashiMSugiyamaKAssociation between genetic polymorphisms of the prostaglandin F2α receptor gene and response to latanoprostOphthalmology20071141039104517467803
  • LiangYWoodwardDFGuzmanVMIdentification and pharmacological characterized of the prostaglandin FP receptor and FP receptor variant complexesBr J Pharmacol20081541079109318587449