ASP7317 for Geographic Atrophy | Plus, Moo Adam, MD, on IV-Free Surgery
Recorded on the final day of ARVO 2026 in Denver, John Kitchens, MD, invites Marci English and Erin Kimbrel, PhD, from Astellas to review some of the most significant cell therapy data to emerge in retina in recent years: the Phase 1b interim results for ASP7317, an investigational RPE cell therapy that showed functional visual acuity gains in patients with advanced GA. The conversation covers what made earlier cell therapies fail, what's different now, the path to a registrational trial, and two additional pipeline programs: ASP2767 (a gene therapy for glaucoma) and ASP2020 (an immune-evasive RPE cell therapy for Stargardt disease).
The Vitreoretinal View segment features Murtaza Adam, MD, who has been performing IV-free vitreoretinal surgery since 2018, now accounting for roughly 70% of his cases. He breaks down patient selection, practical logistics, and why the approach could serve as a bridge to office-based surgery.
John and Scott then cover the realities of office-based surgery and speculate on what needs to change for retina surgeons to embrace it.
Hosts: John Kitchens, MD, Scott Krzywonos
Topics Covered
ASP7317 Phase 1b Interim Results
ASP7317: investigational RPE cell therapy derived from human embryonic stem cells, delivered via subretinal transplantation in advanced GA secondary to AMD
Three dose cohorts with severity stratification; BCVA improvements observed in multiple patients, including gains of 2 lines
GA lesion area stabilized in treated eyes; only 1 month of immunosuppression required
Mechanism: likely a combination of cell replacement, phagocytic debris clearance, and trophic factor secretion
Why earlier RPE transplantation attempts failed: engraftment and immune rejection; advances in differentiation technique and surgical delivery have changed the picture
Pipeline & Path Forward
Astellas plans to engage regulators in the coming months with the goal of moving directly to Phase 3; functional BCVA endpoints expected to be central to the registrational design
Complement inhibitors and ASP7317 seen as complementary across the GA spectrum: slowing progression in early disease, potentially restoring function in advanced disease
ASP2020: iPS-derived RPE cell therapy for Stargardt disease; Phase 1 expected in 2026; EVOLVE natural history study ongoing
ASP2767: AAV gene therapy for neuroprotection of retinal ganglion cells in glaucoma; IND filing anticipated shortly
Vitreoretinal View: IV-Free Surgery (Murtaza Adam, MD)
Oral sedation plus sub-Tenon's block replaces IV anesthesia in approximately 70% of Dr. Adam's cases; in practice since 2018 with published safety data
Patient benefits: no fasting, no anesthesiologist copay, no GLP-1 or anticoagulation concerns; appropriate patients can drive themselves home
Patient selection is key, and active patient communication during surgery is essential
Office-Based Surgery in 2026
The financial model isn't there yet: no facility fee reimbursement in the office setting, and organized ophthalmology advocacy has stalled
Key Takeaways
ASP7317 Phase 1b data showed cell-based therapy led to functional BCVA gains in advanced GA.
Astellas views complement inhibitors and ASP7317 as complementary tools, not competitors, across the GA disease spectrum.
IV-free vitreoretinal surgery is practical, patient-friendly, and already in routine use — but the path to office-based surgery still requires a reimbursement solution.
Credits Production & Marketing: Laura Brown | Business Operations: Liz Hogan
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