FormalPara Key Summary Points

An ongoing global shortage of verteporfin (Visudyne®) limits the treatment with photodynamic therapy used for several chorioretinal diseases, leading to possible irreversible vision loss.

The worldwide supply of verteporfin appears to be manufactured by a single factory situated in the United States and is distributed by different companies per region.

Over the past years, deliveries of batches of verteporfin have been scarce, unpredictable, and poorly communicated on by the responsible companies.

National and international steps can be undertaken to monitor medicine shortages, and to fairly distribute remaining medication within the country or within a region.

Introduction

Since May 2020, there has been a persisting worldwide shortage of verteporfin (brand name Visudyne®) [1]. As verteporfin is required to perform photodynamic therapy (PDT), which is the preferred treatment for several eye diseases, this shortage has a great impact on ophthalmological care worldwide. Despite reported efforts from the manufacturer to restore production of verteporfin, it still cannot be supplied at the required scale, a situation which is expected to last at least until the end of 2024 [1]. This results in patients being undertreated which potentially can lead to irreversible loss of vision [2,3,4]. This article aims to provide insights into the origin of the shortage, an update on the current standings, suggestions on how we can move forward, and how we could prevent similar issues in the future.

This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not contain any new studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.

Photodynamic Therapy in Ophthalmology

Verteporfin is used as a photosensitizing agent to perform PDT in several ophthalmological conditions. Verteporfin is injected intravenously over 5–10 min and after injection, it is activated locally in the retina and choroid using illumination with a laser that emits 689 nm wavelength light for a duration of either 42 s (i.e., half-time) or 83 s (i.e., full-time), after which choroidal remodeling occurs [5]. PDT in ophthalmology was first introduced in the year 2000 to treat patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) [6]. Verteporfin is still registered for treating nAMD and for choroidal neovascularization (CNV) that may occur in highly myopic patients. However, in current clinical practice, with the introduction of intravitreal injections of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) agents, the role of PDT in these conditions has been greatly reduced. Still, PDT is deemed to be very effective in several other ophthalmological conditions, mainly those in which a pathological choroidal state is thought to play a pathophysiological role. These include central serous chorioretinopathy (CSC), polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV), and choroidal hemangioma (CH). For some of these conditions, it is considered the only effective treatment [7,8,9].

Manufacturing

Verteporfin is currently manufactured in bulk by Alcami Carolinas Corporation (Charleston, SC, USA) for the following distributors: Bausch Health US, LLC (Bridgewater, NJ, USA) for the US market, Neon Healthcare Ltd. (Hertford, UK) for the UK market, and Cheplapharm Arzneimittel GmbH (Greifswald, Germany) for the EU market [10, 11]. It was not possible to identify whether there currently is a sole producer of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) or that the API is produced by more companies. However, it seems that there is a single factory situated in the United States, which is responsible for the initial production of verteporfin for the world market. The production of the final product is complex and includes multiple additional ingredients in order to obtain a stable product and part of the process involves freeze drying of the solution.

Shortage

Official Communication on the Shortage

The first mention of the verteporfin shortage by the European Medicine Agency (EMA) was in November 2021 [1]. In this notice it was stated that there had been a reduction in manufacturing capacity of verteporfin since May 2020, one and a half years before. The cause was said to be a reduction in manufacturing capabilities (defect in the filling machine), after which the manufacturing process was moved to an alternative production line in the same building. In this initial communication, it was said that supplies would be resumed in November 2021 and that the shortage would be resolved by the first quarter of 2022 [12]. It was mentioned that “remaining stocks were distributed in a balanced manner”, and that a small batch of verteporfin was transferred from the United States to the European market [12]. Besides, it was stated that a newly manufactured product had been imported into the EU and was awaiting quality control. Packaging was planned for October 2021 [12].

In a later update in August 2022, it was said that the production of verteporfin was restored in the first quarter of 2022, but at limited capacity [13]. At present, the availability of verteporfin is expected to be limited until the end of 2024 [1]. Again, it was stressed that Cheplapharm will ensure a fair allocation of remaining and newly produced stocks of verteporfin among the affected countries, based on historic demand.

Interestingly, as per March 2023, the website of the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) marks the verteporfin shortage as “resolved” [14]. The duration of the shortage is listed as running from 18 October 2022 to 9 February 2023. However, insufficient supplies have remained in many parts of the world.

In addition, the website of producer Bausch + Lomb and the English website of Cheplapharm, the market authorization holder for the European market, do not mention the verteporfin shortage.

Hence, contradictory and scattered information by the regulatory authorities, manufacturers, and distributors hampers an accurate topical overview.

Unofficial Communication on the Shortage and Deliveries of Verteporfin Batches in The Netherlands

PDT has been a well-established treatment in the Netherlands for many years. Initially for nAMD, but in recent years also for CSC and PCV [15,16,17]. For CSC, this has mainly been based on outcomes of two multicenter randomized controlled trials initiated in the Netherlands, the PLACE and SPECTRA trials, which favored PDT as the preferred first-line treatment [18,19,20,21,22]. Before the shortage, approximately 700 PDT procedures per year were performed in the Netherlands. In these procedures, half the originally described verteporfin dosage (3 mg/square meter of body surface area) was used in most patients with CSC, in accordance with current literature [7]. Over the past few years, the supplies of verteporfin to the Netherlands have been insufficient to treat all patients eligible to PDT. Currently, approximately 50–55% of the normal amount of PDT procedures can be performed. These treatments are allocated to patients selected by a national committee of medical retina specialists, after having discussed each individual patient sent in for review by one of the PDT-performing Dutch centers. Importantly, allocation criteria have been adjusted on a regular basis over these past few years by the national committee. For example, involvement of the Dutch Medication Coordination Centre led to a more future scenario based modeling of supply and demand. However, ad hoc changes in expected deliveries meant that these scenarios had to be adjusted regularly. If the prospects of new supplies were favorable, numbers could be increased to approximately 100 treatments per month, as numerous patients were already waiting to be treated. If expected supplies were more limited, the amount of monthly treated patients had to be reduced to approximately 50 or even 35 cases [2, 3]. This time consuming process has led to delays as well as uncertainty whether the required PDT treatments can actually be executed, which is difficult to accept both for patients and ophthalmologists. Due to the global shortage of verteporfin several countries prohibit export. This hampers the flow of verteporfin amongst countries. National price differences of verteporfin also complicate balancing the available medication by import and export.

Equal Distribution of Verteporfin Batches Between Countries

Despite the official information through EMA from the EU market authorization holder Cheplapharm that mentions assuring a fair allocation of the currently available supplies of verteporfin based on existing demand [13], other information challenges this. Of note, several countries have not received any verteporfin over the last few years [23]. It is thus unclear how this ‘fair allocation’ has been executed.

It appears there are also differences between countries in different regions of the world. This was revealed in the results of the questionnaire that we sent to numerous retinal specialists around the world, which was a part of our previous article [23]. The exact cause for this variation is difficult to establish, and may be multifactorial: different distributors, practice patterns of ophthalmologists, and the possibility of reimbursement for PDT could be of importance.

Current Measures

The Netherlands

As we reported in our previous article on the verteporfin shortage, in the Netherlands there is still an active committee of ophthalmologists from all main PDT-treating centers that allocates the available supply of verteporfin to the patients that need it most [23]. This committee was erected in the summer of 2021, shortly after the upcoming shortage of verteporfin was communicated on by Cheplapharm. The committee collectively evaluates all individual cases from within the Netherlands to see if they met their criteria for PDT treatment. The original criteria set by this committee were described in our previous article [23]. These criteria for eligibility for PDT treatment have been adjusted several times based on current and predicted availability of verteporfin. The United Kingdom and France also prioritized specific cases for PDT treatment. In the United Kingdom, available verteporfin was “reserved for the treatment of ocular cancer patients” [24]. In France, there are still prioritization criteria in effect, and the treating physician can request an ampoule of verteporfin via a form available at the website of Cheplapharm [25]. Denmark had neither a national prioritization strategy nor a committee to evaluate cases for therapy, and treatment was prioritized at each individual center according to obtained verteporfin from time to time at the discretion of the treating physicians [26, 27]. The largest center in Denmark systematically prioritized treatment of CH over cases with CSC. However, the Netherlands had the only committee consisting of representative ophthalmologists from each PDT treatment center, who evaluated every case that might be eligible for PDT treatment. This committee has meetings every month, and currently approximately 50–55% of the usual number of patients can be treated with PDT. With the current outlook on limited supplies of verteporfin, several national authorities have recommended keeping this committee active, and keeping the criteria for allocating treatment with PDT fairly strict. The criteria that are currently used in the Netherlands can be found in Table 1.

Table 1 Prioritization criteria in the allocation of remaining ampoules of verteporfin in the Netherlands, as of January 2024

European Union

On 25 January 2022, the European Parliament published a new regulation called “REGULATION (EU) 2022/123 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on a reinforced role for the European Medicines Agency in crisis preparedness and management for medicinal products and medical devices” [28]. In this regulation, the European Parliament highlights the complexity of shortages of medicinal products and the fact that it is a priority of the European Parliament to further investigate and manage these shortages. For this, the European Parliament announced multiple initiatives, including the erection of the European shortages monitoring platform (ESMP). The ESMP aims to “monitor, prevent and manage actual or potential shortages of medicinal products on the critical medicines lists during public health emergencies and major events” or “actual or potential shortages of medicinal products that are likely to lead to a public health emergency or a major event” [28]. Additionally, on 11 May 2022, the EMA launched a new committee to oversee medicine shortages and their risks for patient health on a European level [29]. The first meeting of the Executive Steering Group on Shortages and Safety of Medicinal Products (also known as Medicines Shortages Steering Group (MSSG)) has taken place. The MSSG consists of one representative from the European Commission, one representative from the EMA, and representatives from all EU Member States. A larger role for this group is outlined in the proposal for the revision of the pharmaceutical regulation by the European Commission. This includes their participation in establishing a list of critical shortages of medicinal products that require coordination at the EU level [30]. This could possibly facilitate fair allocation of scarce supplies throughout Europe and hopefully address medicine shortages more adequately. Currently, in the case of verteporfin, the MSSG actively monitors the shortage, maintains communication with Cheplapharm, and helps steer toward a solution.

Alternative Treatment Options

With the shortage of verteporfin still current and a limited prospect of a stable supply that is also sufficient to clear the backlog, treating ophthalmologists are being forced not to treat patients who need PDT or to delay treatment. For this very particular situation, alternative options are poor. Due to its complexity and the lack of pharmaceutical-grade active pharmaceutical ingredients, pharmacy compounding was deemed unattainable by hospital pharmacists [31]. As a result, ophthalmologists are seeking alternative medicinal products [15, 32], but no strongly evidence-based alternative treatments with similar efficacy as PDT are currently known. To our knowledge, no other photosensitizers have become available for performing PDT in the eye since our last paper on the verteporfin shortage has been published [23]. Verteporfin dosage reduction is also an option to treat more patients with PDT. Using half-dose PDT had already scientifically been established in the treatment of CSC [7, 8, 15], and to a lesser extent for PCV [33].

For PCV, combination of intravitreal injections with anti-VEGF agents and PDT is recommended in cases where intravitreal injections with anti-VEGF agents alone have had insufficient effect on the presence of intraretinal or subretinal fluid. However, during the verteporfin shortage, ophthalmologists in the Netherlands experienced that patients with PCV may also respond well to monotherapy with aflibercept. This has also been shown in previous literature [34, 35]. If polypoidal lesions in PCV are outside the macula, patients can also be treated with focal laser [36].

Preventive Measures

Policy and Legislation

With the current abundance in medicine shortages, it is promising that policymakers at the level of the EU are looking to introduce a more strict surveillance of current shortages to ensure that they are addressed timely. With a more intensified monitoring and regulation of medicine supplies, future impending shortages may even be prevented, for example by upscaling production by other companies through compulsory licensing. In our previous article, we highlighted some possibilities that may help in reducing the consequences of medicine shortages [23]. At a national level, monitoring systems to quickly identify potential shortages have been set up. International collaboration of these initiatives might identify upcoming shortages at an earlier stage. In order to respond to shortages rapidly, a Medication Coordination Centre could be set up to monitor supply and stocks along the supply chain and at end users. If necessary, coordinated redistribution of stocks should be made possible. As of current, market authorization holders are expected to develop shortage prevention and response plans [37]. Besides this, there are other possible measures to prevent medicine shortages. When a market authorization holder expects a reduction in production capability, competitors should be informed of this to allow them to scale up their production, in order to maintain a steady supply to patients within their range of supply. Alternatively, when a patent prevents competitors from producing the same medicine, compulsory licensing can be enforced [38]. This allows other companies to produce the same product despite patent protection, for the purpose of maintaining supplies. Finally, keeping an emergency stock of medication helps prevent temporary shortages. Recently, in July 2022, the Dutch government has reduced this emergency stock requirement from a stock lasting 5 months to 2.5 months [39]. They state that this emergency stock will be able to cover half of temporary medicine shortages. However, it can be discussed whether individual countries should keep emergency stocks or whether this is something that should be managed on a European level.

New Treatment Developments

When there is a lack of a specific medication, replacing this medication with an alternative compound remains the most straightforward solution. However, for verteporfin, this has been found to be impossible so far. Currently, verteporfin is the only photosensitizer on the market that has the correct safety profile, and pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties for treatment of the choroid and retina. Past endeavors to develop photosensitizers for eye diseases have unfortunately failed. Some of these have been described in previous publications [23, 40, 41]. Future research could reveal alternative photosensitizers suited for treating chorioretinal diseases.

Sparked by the verteporfin shortage, a study has appeared testing the efficacy of “no-dose” PDT in CSC [42]. In this case, the same laser treatment is used in the eye as with regular PDT, but without the use of any photosensitizer. This small retrospective study without a control group shows that there may be a treatment effect, but further prognostic studies, preferably randomized controlled trials, would have to be performed to provide stronger evidence of its effect for the several diseases in which PDT can be performed.

Finally, a more thorough understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms that play a role in CSC, PCV, and CH may help give new insights leading to the development of new treatment options.

Positive Sides to the Verteporfin Shortage

Although medicine shortages are never welcome, there are some positive sides to the verteporfin shortage that deserve to be mentioned. First, the erection of the national committee allocating verteporfin ampoules has brought some advantages. Given that the Netherlands is a relatively small country (population of roughly 18 million), this committee consisted of ophthalmologists from all centers performing PDT within the country. This allowed a wonderful opportunity for these specialists to meet and discuss cases, and exchange their personal experiences with treatment settings, as well as alternative treatments for several patient categories. For example, for patients with PCV, the previously described aflibercept monotherapy or focal laser treatment could be considered. In cases with subretinal fluid caused by CSC, the fluid may subside spontaneously without intervention, within 3–4 months. Therefore, it could be advised not to treat these cases with PDT too hastily.

Furthermore, the shortage of verteporfin allowed ophthalmologists to treat their patients with half-dose PDT, instead of full-dose PDT. This has been more established in cases with chronic CSC, but may also have effect in patients with PCV not responding to anti-VEGF monotherapy. The shortage also stimulated ophthalmologists to plan their PDT treatments effectively, such as planning multiple treatments in one day to ensure that all available verteporfin is used as efficiently as possible.

Finally, this period of verteporfin shortage may provide an opportunity for analyzing the results of patients requiring eye care during this time of scarcity. Retrospective analysis of PCV cases may reveal whether patients responded well to alternative treatments such as aflibercept monotherapy or focal laser treatment, or to half-dose PDT. Cases with CSC may be evaluated for the rate of spontaneous resolution of subretinal fluid while awaiting PDT treatment, and the longer term visual acuity after deferred or no treatment.

Conclusions

The number of medicine shortages is increasing and becoming a topic of debate in both society and politics. The current verteporfin shortage illustrates the complexity and severity of the issue, due to the significant and sometimes irreversible impact on the vision of patients with several different ophthalmological diseases. Thus, efforts should be undertaken to prevent such threatening medicine shortages in the future, particularly when no alternative treatment options exist. However, in the unfortunate event of an unavoidable shortage, international coordination could foster fair allocation and mitigate the impact of the shortage. Although medicine shortages are not preferable, they may also help medical specialists in reconsidering alternative treatment options and realigning practice patterns with other medical specialists in their field.