The Columbus Dispatch

Eye drops may eliminate need for reading glasses

- Adrianna Rodriguez

A new drug that could help more than 128 million Americans read without needing glasses has been submitted to the Food and Drug Administra­tion for approval.

The investigat­ional eye drop — called AGN-190584 — is expected to be approved by the end of this year, according to a statement released last week by Allergan Eye Care, an Abbvie company.

The eye drops are a pilocarpin­e solution meant to treat the symptoms of presbyopia, an age-related condition that causes gradual loss of the eyes’ ability to focus on nearby objects, according to the Mayo Clinic.

It’s a natural but annoying part of aging, said Dr. Robert S. Bailey, chief of the Cataract and Primary Eye Care Service at Wills Eye Hospital in Philadelph­ia.

“It happens from (the age) of 10 and then you gradually lose that focusing ability to the age of 70 when you lose the ability totally,” he said. Most patients begin to notice it in their mid-40s.

Presbyopia is caused by the loss of elasticity in the eyes’ lens, which makes it harder to change shape when it needs to shift focus from faraway objects to closer ones.

The eye drops don’t treat the cause of presbyopia but help treat its symptoms. Instead of targeting the eyes’ lens, the drops make the eyes’ pupils smaller, creating a pinhole effect that increases the depth of focus.

“If you have a camera and you make the aperture small (and) let little light in, the depth of focus — or the distance over which things are in focus — are much greater than if you open up the camera,” Bailey said. “It gives you greater depth of focus not just far away but closer as well.”

The new drug applicatio­n is based on two randomized trials of 750 participan­ts ages 40 to 55 in which patients were treated either with the drug or with a placebo once a day for 30 days.

The studies found the eye drops were safe and effective, with participan­ts gaining three more lines on the reading chart in low light compared with those who received the placebo, according to trial results published by the company in 2020. The eye drops began working as soon as 15 minutes after they were applied but reached their peak effectiveness after an hour.

Side effects that occurred in fewer than 5% of patients included headache, red eyes, blurred vision and some eye pain.

If approved by the FDA, AGN-190584 would be the first eye drop that treats presbyopia. However, pilocarpin­e eye drops have already been approved at a higher concentrat­ion for glaucoma patients.

Those patients use it about four times a day at 4% concentrat­ion; presbyopia patients may use it only once a day or on demand at 1.25%, said Dr. Michael Robinson, vice president and global therapeuti­c area head at Abbvie. Future trials will look at how the drug works when used more than once a day, he said.

“In glaucoma, (pilocarpin­e) improves the outflow of fluid from the eye and that lowers the intraocula­r pressure,” he said. “Here (with presbyopia patients), we’re using pilocarpin­e to basically constrict the pupil.”

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