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About
Corneal collagen crosslinking has been demonstrated as an effective method of reducing progression of both keratoconus and post-refractive corneal ectasia, as well as decreasing the steepness of the cornea in these pathologies.
Performing an accelerated CXL procedure with pulsed UVA light may increase the oxygenation of the cornea, which may improve the crosslinking efficacy.
Full description
This is a prospective, single-site study to analyze the use of continuous vs pulsed UVA light after removal of the epithelium for the collagen crosslinking procedure for keratoconus and post-refractive corneal ectasia. In the standard crosslinking treatment, the cornea is treated with a continuous UVA light treatment with a power of 3mW/cm2 for 30 minutes. CXL treatment can potentially be performed in a shorter period of time by increasing the power of the UVA light and decreasing the exposure time, while maintaining the same total energy delivered to the cornea. This study will compare the efficacy and safety of accelerated crosslinking using either a continuous or pulsed UVA treatment. One group will be randomized to be treated with 12mW/cm2 of continuous UVA light treatment for 7.5 minutes and the other group will be treated with 12mW/cm2 of pulsed UVA light treatment for 15 minutes.
The primary efficacy parameter that will be evaluated over time is maximum keratometry (Kmax) in the randomized eyes for each treatment group. The secondary efficacy parameter is to determine if the two treatment groups are equivalent in their mean Kmax change at 6 months after treatment compared with baseline.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Eyes classified as either normal, atypical normal, or keratoconus suspect on the severity grading scheme
Corneal pachymetry measuring 300 microns or less at the thinnest point measured by Pentacam in the eye(s) to be treated
Previous ocular condition (other than refractive error) in the eye(s) to be treated that may predispose the eye for future complications, for example:
A history of chemical injury or delayed healing in the eye(s) to be treated
Pregnancy (including plan to become pregnant) or lactation during the course of the study
A known sensitivity to study medications
Patients with nystagmus or any other condition that would prevent a steady gaze during the CXL treatment or other diagnostic tests
Patients with current condition that, in the investigator's opinion, would interfere with or prolong epithelial healing
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
170 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Stacey Lazar; BethAnn Furlong-Hibbert
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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