The ODAK ('Orphan Drug for Acanthamoeba Keratitis') project is working to develop a safe and effective treatment for Acanthamoeba keratitis (AK), a rare infectious eye disease which causes severe debilitation and can lead to blindness. The disease, which causes severe debilitation and can lead to blindness, affects one in 100 000 people in the EU - with 85% of cases being associated with contact lens wearing. It is caused by a common protozoan infecting the cornea and it is extremely difficult to treat because of the pathogens' resistance to antimicrobial therapy.
Aiming to fill the current gap in safe,
effective and approved drugs to treat AK, the ODAK project will
undertake preclinical and clinical research on the Orphan Drug
Polihexanide (PHMB). 'Orphan drugs' are medicinal products intended for
the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of life-threatening or
debilitating rare diseases like AK. They are 'orphans' because the
pharmaceutical industry has less interest under normal market conditions
in developing them as they are intended for only a small number of
patients suffering from very rare conditions. As such, the work of ODAK
on PHMB is particularly vital - already the use of this drug has been
shown to greatly improve treatment outcomes for AK, especially when used
in the early stages of the disease.
The ODAK consortium of five European companies and one university is
currently engaged in preclinical trials, with clinical trials due to
start in 2015. Through these, the project team hopes to identify optimal
PHMB formulations and recommend the best dose-benefit treatment
regimes. Professor John Dart, leading Ophthalmologist at Moorfields Eye
Hospital London, notes, 'Acanthamoeba keratitis is an uncommon disease
but life changing for most individuals affected. There is currently no
approved, licensed treatment for this condition. The EU is to be
commended for making this important investment into the development of a
safe and effective medical therapy for the condition'. AK, which was
extremely rare before the widespread use of contact lenses in the 1980s,
produces symptoms such as severe eye pain, eye redness, blurred vision,
light sensitivity, eye irritation and excessive tearing. The diagnosis
of the disease is problematic as symptoms are often mistaken for
bacterial or herpes virus infections, and this leads to delayed
treatment. As with many conditions, early diagnosis and treatment is a
major factor in achieving good treatment outcomes.
AK is one of the many existing rare diseases (RD) for which research
into treatements is badly needed. Many patients with RD still lack a
proper diagnosis and most of them are left without an effective
treatment. Reseach into RD is also very relevant from a scientific point
of view as RD are model diseases for more common disorders and are
strong drivers of innovation. The ODAK project is one of many EU-funded
research projects supporting the goal of the International Rare Disease
Research Consortium (IRDiRC) to provide 200 new therapies for rare
diseases by 2020. SUPPORT-IRDIRC, for example, is working to directly
support the IRDiRC in its mission to coordinate and foster international
collaborative research on RD. Meanwhile the harmonisation efforts of
RD-CONNECT, an integrated platform connecting registries, biobanks and
clinical bioinformatics for rare disease research, will be one of the
primary enablers of progress in IRDiRC.
Source: Uniwersytet w Rouen
Reference documents: Based on information from RODAK