22 February 2026
OCULAR THERAPEUTIX, INC
10-K / February 5, 2026
Ocular Therapeutix
Company overview
- Integrated biopharmaceutical company focused on retina and other ophthalmic indications.
- Core platform: ELUTYX bioresorbable hydrogel technology for local, programmed-release drug delivery to the eye.
- Lead clinical asset: AXPAXLI (OTX-TKI), an axitinib-embedded intravitreal hydrogel for retinal diseases.
- Commercial product: DEXTENZA, a preservative-free dexamethasone intracanalicular insert for post-surgical ocular inflammation and pain and for ocular itching in allergic conjunctivitis in patients aged 2 and older.
- Additional program: OTX-TIC, a travoprost intracameral hydrogel for lowering intraocular pressure in open-angle glaucoma or ocular hypertension (Phase 2 completed).
- Global collaboration with AffaMed Therapeutics Limited for DEXTENZA and OTX-TIC in parts of Asia, including China, with upfront and milestone payments plus tiered royalties.
Technology and approach
- ELUTYX hydrogel platform
- PEG-based, bioresorbable hydrogels with ester linkages that hydrolyze in the eye to release embedded drug over extended periods (months to a year or more).
- Hydrogels are soft, lack a rigid shell, and fully bioresorb after drug release without leaving harmful byproducts.
- Platform benefits include programmed local release, reduced treatment burden, fewer injections for some indications, and avoidance of preservative-related side effects.
- Delivery modalities enabled by ELUTYX
- Intravitreal hydrogels (e.g., AXPAXLI) for sustained anti-angiogenic therapy.
- Intracameral hydrogels (e.g., OTX-TIC) for sustained prostaglandin analog delivery to lower IOP.
- Intracanalicular inserts (DEXTENZA) for surface-eye drug delivery without patient self-administration.
- Criteria for selecting active ingredients
- Prior FDA approval for the indication, scientific rationale, patentability and freedom-to-operate, high potency, supplier availability, and compatibility with the hydrogel delivery system.
Products and lead programs
-
AXPAXLI (axitinib intravitreal hydrogel)
- Indications: wet age-related macular degeneration (wet AMD) and diabetic retinal diseases (NPDR, DME, PDR, RVO).
- Phase 3 registrational program:
- SOL program for wet AMD
- SOL-1: repeat-dosing Phase 3 comparing AXPAXLI 450 µg to aflibercept 2 mg; Week 36 primary endpoint; Week 52 and Week 76 re-dosing; Week 104 safety follow-up; SPA with FDA in place.
- SOL-R: repeat-dosing Phase 3 non-inferiority trial vs aflibercept 2 mg Q8W; primary endpoint at Week 56.
- SOL-X: long-term open-label safety extension planned to start in Q2 2026 with a three-year follow-up for long-term safety and durability.
- SOL program for wet AMD
- Program status and data timelines
- SOL-1 enrolled 344 randomized, treatment-naïve subjects; topline Week 52 data expected at the Macula Society meeting (Feb 25–28, 2026). All subjects re-dosed at Week 52 and Week 76; safety follow-up continues to Week 104.
- SOL-R targeted 555 randomized; 631 subjects were ultimately randomized; topline data expected Q1 2027.
- Regulatory path
- Plan to pursue an NDA under 505(b)(2) using axitinib’s prior approvals. The program includes a superiority trial (SOL-1) and a non-inferiority trial (SOL-R) as potential bases for submission.
- Supporting data
- Phase 1 Australia and Phase 1 US data support durability and activity, with long-term PK/PD and real-world durability discussed.
-
HELIOS program (diabetic retinal disease)
- HELIOS-3: Phase 3, approximately 930 NPDR without CI-DME subjects in a three-arm superiority trial evaluating two AXPAXLI 450 µg dosing regimens vs sham; primary endpoint is an ordinal 2-step DRSS change at Week 52.
- HELIOS-2: potential Phase 3 trial comparing AXPAXLI 450 µg vs ranibizumab 0.3 mg (optional; not yet initiated) that could support a superiority label.
- HELIOS-1: Phase 1 completed with data through Week 48 showing safety and DRSS improvements.
-
OTX-TIC (travoprost intracameral hydrogel)
- Status: Phase 2 completed for OAG/OHT; next steps under evaluation.
- Phase 2 results showed sustained IOP reduction of roughly 24–30% from baseline over six months after a single implant.
- AffaMed holds commercial rights for OTX-TIC in specified Asian territories.
-
DEXTENZA (dexamethasone intracanalicular insert)
- Commercial product since 2019 for post-surgical inflammation and pain; approved for ocular itching in allergic conjunctivitis in patients aged 2+ following a 2021 sNDA.
- Commercial model: sold through specialty distributors for ambulatory surgery centers, hospital outpatient departments, and physician offices; supported by a dedicated reimbursement and sales force.
- Usage and safety: nearly 750,000 eyes treated since launch; adverse events reported in approximately 2 per 10,000 patients.
- AffaMed has rights to develop and commercialize DEXTENZA in specified markets in Asia.
Commercial, manufacturing, and intellectual property
- Manufacturing footprint (Bedford, MA)
- ~20,000 sq ft facility for manufacturing and packaging DEXTENZA.
- ~71,000 sq ft facility (plus expansion) for drug products and manufacturing of AXPAXLI materials and associated devices.
- Strategy emphasizes internal manufacturing control to support commercial scale and to inform potential second-source outsourcing decisions.
- Market context
- AXPAXLI targets large addressable markets in exudative retinal diseases, including wet AMD and diabetic retinal diseases.
- DEXTENZA has an established commercial footprint and a defined safety profile.
- Intellectual property
- Over 300 issued or pending U.S. and foreign patents and applications related to DEXTENZA, OTX-TIC, AXPAXLI, and the hydrogel technology.
- Licensing and IP governance with Incept, LLC under original and amended agreements, with joint and controlled prosecution arrangements in defined areas.
Partnerships and licensing economics
- AffaMed License Agreement for DEXTENZA and OTX-TIC in Asia
- Upfront payment: $12.0 million.
- Development, regulatory, and commercial milestone payments: up to $91.0 million aggregate.
- Royalties: tiered, in the low-teens to low-twenties percent on net sales, per product and jurisdiction.
- Cost-sharing: sponsor generally bears development costs; AffaMed covers certain territory-specific and regulatory costs and may reimburse some global study data or local studies per the agreement.
- Earlier payments and milestones:
- $1.0 million milestone tied to FDA sNDA approval for DEXTENZA allergic conjunctivitis (Q4 2021).
- $2.0 million clinical support payment related to OTX-TIC Asia development (Q2 2022).
- $1.0 million milestone upon NMPA approval of AffaMed’s Phase 3 registrational study in China (Q2 2023).
- Incept license arrangements
- Exclusive worldwide rights in a broad ophthalmic field with royalties on net sales in the low- to mid-single-digit range, and possible upfront payments in exchange for royalty adjustments.
- Joint IP arrangements around shape-changing and Incept-related IP, with prosecution responsibilities allocated by agreement.
Regulatory and clinical development framework
- FDA engagement includes SPA agreements for SOL-1 and HELIOS-3.
- A 505(b)(2) NDA pathway is planned for AXPAXLI.
- Trial designs include long-term safety extensions (SOL-X) and consideration of combination approaches with existing anti-VEGF therapies.
- Pricing and reimbursement considerations, including PDUFA user fees and post-approval requirements, are part of regulatory planning.
Other program and platform context
- DEXTENZA is the first FDA-approved drug-eluting intracanalicular insert delivering dexamethasone for up to 30 days.
- ELUTYX-based materials have clinical use history in the human body since 1992, with safety data across more than five million patients in multiple FDA-approved treatments.
Summary
Ocular Therapeutix develops and commercializes ophthalmic therapies using the ELUTYX hydrogel platform to provide long-acting, local drug delivery to the eye. The company’s portfolio includes a marketed product (DEXTENZA) and development-stage assets (AXPAXLI for retinal disease and OTX-TIC for glaucoma), supported by strategic licensing partnerships in Asia and a broad IP estate. Key program milestones include active Phase 3 registrational programs for AXPAXLI (SOL-1, SOL-R, SOL-X) and ongoing clinical work for HELIOS-3 in diabetic retinal disease. Financial highlights from licensing arrangements include an AffaMed upfront of $12.0 million and potential milestone payments up to $91.0 million, plus tiered royalties.
