Efficacy, durability, and safety of intravitreal faricimab up to every 16 weeks for neovascular age-related macular degeneration (TENAYA and LUCERNE): two randomised, double-masked, phase 3, non-inferiority trials

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Jeffrey S. Heier
  • Arshad M. Khanani
  • Carlos Quezada Ruiz
  • Karen Basu
  • Philip J. Ferrone
  • Christopher Brittain
  • Marta S. Figueroa
  • Hugh Lin
  • Frank G. Holz
  • Vaibhavi Patel
  • Timothy Y.Y. Lai
  • David Silverman
  • Carl Regillo
  • Balakumar Swaminathan
  • Francesco Viola
  • Chui Ming Gemmy Cheung
  • Tien Y. Wong
  • Ashkan Abbey
  • Elmira Abdulaeva
  • Prema Abraham
  • Alfredo Adan Civera
  • Hansjurgen Agostini
  • Arturo Alezzandrini
  • Virgil Alfaro
  • Arghavan Almony
  • Lebriz Altay
  • Payam Amini
  • Andrew Antoszyk
  • Etelka Aradi
  • Luis Arias
  • Jennifer Arnold
  • Riaz Asaria
  • Sergei Astakhov
  • Yury Astakhov
  • Carl C. Awh
  • Chandra Balaratnasingam
  • Sanjiv Banerjee
  • Caroline Baumal
  • Matthias Becker
  • Rubens Belfort
  • Galina Bratko
  • William Z. Bridges
  • Jamin Brown
  • David M. Brown
  • Maria Budzinskaya
  • Sylvia Buffet
  • Stuart Burgess
  • Iksoo Byon
  • Michael Larsen
  • Sørensen, Torben Lykke
  • TENAYA and LUCERNE Investigators

Background: Faricimab is a bispecific antibody that acts through dual inhibition of both angiopoietin-2 and vascular endothelial growth factor A. We report primary results of two phase 3 trials evaluating intravitreal faricimab with extension up to every 16 weeks for neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD). Methods: TENAYA and LUCERNE were randomised, double-masked, non-inferiority trials across 271 sites worldwide. Treatment-naive patients with nAMD aged 50 years or older were randomly assigned (1:1) to intravitreal faricimab 6·0 mg up to every 16 weeks, based on protocol-defined disease activity assessments at weeks 20 and 24, or aflibercept 2·0 mg every 8 weeks. Randomisation was performed through an interactive voice or web-based response system using a stratified permuted block randomisation method. Patients, investigators, those assessing outcomes, and the funder were masked to group assignments. The primary endpoint was mean change in best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) from baseline averaged over weeks 40, 44, and 48 (prespecified non-inferiority margin of four letters), in the intention-to-treat population. Safety analyses included patients who received at least one dose of study treatment. These trials are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (TENAYA NCT03823287 and LUCERNE NCT03823300). Findings: Across the two trials, 1329 patients were randomly assigned between Feb 19 and Nov 19, 2019 (TENAYA n=334 faricimab and n=337 aflibercept), and between March 11 and Nov 1, 2019 (LUCERNE n=331 faricimab and n=327 aflibercept). BCVA change from baseline with faricimab was non-inferior to aflibercept in both TENAYA (adjusted mean change 5·8 letters [95% CI 4·6 to 7·1] and 5·1 letters [3·9 to 6·4]; treatment difference 0·7 letters [−1·1 to 2·5]) and LUCERNE (6·6 letters [5·3 to 7·8] and 6·6 letters [5·3 to 7·8]; treatment difference 0·0 letters [–1·7 to 1·8]). Rates of ocular adverse events were comparable between faricimab and aflibercept (TENAYA n=121 [36·3%] vs n=128 [38·1%], and LUCERNE n=133 [40·2%] vs n=118 [36·2%]). Interpretation: Visual benefits with faricimab given at up to 16-week intervals demonstrates its potential to meaningfully extend the time between treatments with sustained efficacy, thereby reducing treatment burden in patients with nAMD. Funding: F Hoffmann-La Roche.

Original languageEnglish
JournalLancet
Volume399
Issue number10326
Pages (from-to)729-740
Number of pages12
ISSN0140-6736
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

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