Safety and biocompatibility of a novel biodegradable aflibercept-drug delivery system in rhesus macaques

Brett D. Story, Sangwan Park, Karolina Roszak, Jaeho Shim, Monica Motta, Michelle Ferneding, Kayla M. Rudeen, Andrew Blandino, Monica Ardon, Sophie Le, Leandro B.C. Teixeira, Glenn Yiu, William F. Mieler, Sara M. Thomasy, Jennifer J. Kang-Mieler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

A clinical need exists for more effective intravitreal (IVT) drug delivery systems (DDS). This study tested the hypothesis that a novel biodegradable, injectable microsphere-hydrogel drug delivery system loaded with aflibercept (aflibercept-DDS) would exhibit long-term safety and biocompatibility in a non-human primate (NHP) model. We generated aflibercept-loaded poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) microparticles with a modified double emulsion technique then embedded them into a biodegradable, thermo-responsive poly (ethylene glycol)-co-(L-lactic-acid) diacrylate/N-isopropylacrylamide hydrogel. Aflibercept-DDS (50 µL, 15 µg) was injected into the right eye of 23 healthy rhesus macaques. A complete ophthalmic examination, intraocular pressure (IOP), corneal pachymetry, specular microscopy, A-scan biometry, streak retinoscopy, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), fluorescein angiography (FA), and electroretinography (ERG) were performed monthly. Globes from 7 NHPs were histologically examined. Aflibercept-DDS was visualized in the vitreous up to 9 months post-IVT injection, slightly impeding fundoscopy in 4 of 23 eyes; no other consistent abnormalities were appreciated during ophthalmic examination. The IOP and total retinal thickness remained normal in all animals over all timepoints. Central corneal thickness, endothelial cell density, axial globe length, and refractive error did not significantly differ from baseline. Scotopic mixed rod-cone implicit times and amplitudes along with photopic cone response implicit times and amplitudes did not significantly differ from control values. No retinal or choroidal vascular abnormalities were detected with FA and normal retinal architecture was preserved using SD-OCT. Intravitreal injection of a biodegradable aflibercept-DDS was safe and well tolerated in NHPs up to 24 months.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2460671
JournalDrug Delivery
Volume32
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

Keywords

  • aflibercept
  • anti-VEGF
  • controlled drug delivery
  • intravitreal injection
  • nonhuman primate
  • thermo-responsive hydrogel

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