OKYO Pharma Announces Start of Phase 2 Clinical Trial to Treat Patients with Neuropathic Corneal Pain

In This Article:

OKYO Pharma LTD
OKYO Pharma LTD
  • Neuropathic corneal pain (NCP) is listed in the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD) as an orphan disease

  • OKYO is the first company to have an IND application granted by the FDA for NCP

  • The Phase 2 trial is designed as a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked study to treat 48 NCP patients

  • OK-101 demonstrated statistically significant pain relief in a recently completed Phase 2 trial of dry eye disease

LONDON and NEW YORK, Oct. 16, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- OKYO Pharma Limited (NASDAQ: OKYO), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing innovative ocular therapies for the treatment of inflammatory dry eye disease (DED), a billion-dollar market, and for neuropathic corneal pain (NCP), an ocular condition associated with pain but without an FDA approved therapy, announced today that screening and recruitment of patients has started for a Phase 2 trial of OK-101 to treat NCP. The Phase 2 study is designed as a double-masked, randomized, 12-week placebo-controlled trial in NCP patients. A total of 48 patients are planned to enroll for the study, with NCP disease confirmed via confocal microscopy. The primary endpoint of this study is to measure pain relief using Visual Analog Scale (VAS) scale.

Neuropathic corneal pain (NCP) is an unmet medical need for which there are no commercially approved treatments available. NCP is a condition that causes pain and sensitivity of the eyes, face, or head. The exact cause of NCP is unknown but thought to result from nerve damage to the cornea combined with inflammation. NCP, which can exhibit as a severe, chronic, or debilitating condition in patients suffering from a host of ophthalmic conditions, is presently treated by various topical and systemic treatments in an off-label fashion.

OK-101 recently demonstrated favorable safety and tolerability in a Phase 2 trial of dry eye patients along with statistically significant improvements in dry eye symptoms such as stinging/burning and ocular pain, which are also hallmarks of NCP. OK-101 was also shown in a cutting-edge mouse model of NCP to significantly reduce neuropathic corneal pain.

The OK-101 trial is designed as a single-center trial and is being led by Pedram Hamrah, MD, of Tufts Medical Center, as Principal Investigator. Dr. Hamrah is Professor and Vice Chair of Research and Academic Programs, and Director of the Center for Translational Ocular Immunology at Tufts Medical Center. An ophthalmologist and a clinician-scientist, Dr. Hamrah is a leading expert in NCP and co-inventor on the OK-101 patent. He is also a member of OKYO’s Scientific Advisory Board.