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The goal of this study is to understand how light sensitivity in the eye affects sleep, mood, alertness, and cognition in adults with glaucoma compared to healthy individuals aged 45-75 years.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Researchers will compare patients with glaucoma and age-matched healthy controls to see if differences in light sensitivity can explain changes in non-visual light responses (i.e., sleep, mood, alertness, and cognition) and whether full-spectrum light exposure can enhance alertness and wellbeing.
Participants will:
Complete eye exams and baseline questionnaires about their sleep, daytime sleepiness, mood, and wellbeing.
Wear a wrist-worn device for 8-16 days to record their sleep patterns and light exposure.
Visit the laboratory for cognitive and attention tests following exposure to two lighting conditions (randomized, cross-over):
This study will help researchers understand how glaucoma affects the brain beyond vision and explore whether light-based interventions can improve quality of life for people living with glaucoma.
Full description
Glaucoma is a chronic eye disease that damages retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), leading to progressive loss of vision. Recent evidence suggests that glaucoma may also affect a special subset of RGCs called intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs), which contain the light-sensitive pigment melanopsin. These cells are critical for regulating non-visual responses to light, such as sleep, mood, alertness, and cognition, by sending light signals from the eye to various regions of the brain.
Patients with glaucoma often report sleep disturbances, fatigue, and mood changes, yet the biological mechanisms behind these symptoms are not fully understood. It remains unclear whether such non-visual effects result from damage to ipRGCs or from other disease-related factors. Understanding this relationship is important for improving the overall wellbeing and quality of life of individuals living with glaucoma.
This study will therefore investigate how glaucoma affects non-visual responses to light and whether brief, safe exposure to full-spectrum light can improve alertness, sleepiness, and mood. The study combines observational and interventional components to comprehensively assess the link between light perception, brain function, and behavior in glaucoma.
Study Design and Procedures
A total of 120 participants will take part in the study:
Each participant attends two study visits:
Visit 1 is done at the clinics (National University Hospital / Singapore National Eye Center) and covers the following:
Participants are given a wrist-worn actigraphy device to record their daily sleep-wake cycles and light exposure for 8-16 days at home, along with a sleep diary.
Visit 2 is done at the laboratory (National University of Singapore - Eye N' Brain Research Platform). After completing actigraphy, participants return for detailed testing of attention, cognition, and vigilance following exposure to two lighting conditions:
Participants undergo two sessions of exposure to each of these lights (separated by a period of standard light during which they perform different versions of the MoCA test).
The timing of the visit is individualized based on each participant's sleep/wake cycle. Participants go through the sessions in a cross-over manner and the order of lighting conditions will be randomized to control for order effects.
Following light exposure, the following cognitive tasks are employed while doing eye tracking and cognitive pupillometry:
Subjective rating scales of mood, wellbeing, and sleepiness are administered before and after each lighting condition and after cognitive assessment to monitor fluctuations throughout the session.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Patients with glaucoma must meet all of the inclusion criteria to participate in this study.
Healthy controls must meet all of the inclusion criteria to participate in this study:
Exclusion criteria
All subjects (patients and controls) meeting any of the exclusion criteria at baseline will be excluded from participation:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
120 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Daniella Mahfoud, MSc.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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