PMID: 8963859Sep 1, 1995Paper

Initial experience with an eight-month sustained-release intravitreal ganciclovir implant for the treatment of CMV retinitis associated with AIDS

Ophthalmic Surgery and Lasers
J S DukerP Ashton

Abstract

An intravitreal device administering ganciclovir in a sustained-release fashion has been developed for site-specific therapy of cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis. The initially tested devices released ganciclovir at a rate of approximately 2 micrograms/hour (Mark I device), yielding an estimated in vivo therapeutic life span of 4 months. This report describes the initial clinical results of a longer-lasting device that releases ganciclovir at a rate of 1 microgram/hour (Mark II device), designed to be effective for up to 8 months. Over a 15-month time period, a total of 39 Mark II intravitreal ganciclovir devices were placed in 35 eyes of 29 patients with a diagnosis of CMV retinitis. At the time of implantation, none of the patients were on systemic anti-CMV therapy. Of the first 29 eyes of the 29 enrolled patients implanted with their initial Mark II device, 28 (97%) had no progression of retinitis at the 4-week postoperative examination. Survival analysis of these initial 29 implants revealed the median time to disease progression was 29.3 weeks (205 days). Serious ocular complications included one case of acute bacterial endophthalmitis (2.9% of eyes or 2.5% of implantations), and four cases of rhegmatogenous retinal detachme...Continue Reading

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