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Comparison of Epinephrine and Phenylephrine/Ketorolac With Regards to Pupil Size

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Penn State Health

Status and phase

Terminated
Phase 4

Conditions

Cataract

Treatments

Drug: Phenylephrine-ketorolac
Drug: Epinephrine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02895035
00005630

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this study is to compare the maintenance of intraoperative mydriasis during cataract surgery between two drugs: epinephrine, which has routinely been used for decades, and Omidria, a newly FDA approved combination drug of phenylephrine and ketorolac. Patients undergoing cataract surgery that are enrolled in the trial will randomly receive one of the drugs in one eye, and the other eye will receive the drug during the subsequent cataract surgery.

Full description

Cataract remains a leading cause of correctable blindness worldwide. Over 3.5 million cataract surgeries in the United States and 20 million cataract surgeries worldwide are performed every year. Cataract surgery is performed by making a small incision, removing the cataractous lens, most often through the process of phacoemulsification, and replacement with an intraocular lens. Like all surgeries, adequate exposure and field of view is vital for a safe and effective surgery. In cataract surgery, the field of view is limited by the diameter of the pupil. Several different drugs, such as cyclopentolate, tropicamide, phenylephrine, and epinephrine are utilized to maintain dilation (mydriasis) of the pupil during surgery.

There are currently two prospective randomized controlled trials comparing phenylephrine/ketorolac to placebo in the published literature. Both of these studies demonstrated that phenylephrine/ketorolac is superior to placebo for the maintenance of mydriasis during cataract surgery. Epinephrine has been the standard of care for intraoperative mydriasis. Phenylephrine/ketorolac (Omidria) is a newly FDA-approved additive for the maintenance of intraoperative mydriasis, but there are currently no published studies comparing epinephrine to phenylephrine/ketorolac for maintenance of mydriasis during cataract surgery.

While both of these drugs have been shown to be superior to placebo for the maintenance of mydriasis, there is a significant cost difference between epinephrine, which has been used for many years, and phenylephrine/ketorolac, which gained FDA approval in 2014. One 4 mL vial of Omidria® is utilized for one cataract surgery, which costs $465.

The primary endpoint to be measured in the study is the mean area under the curve change from baseline in pupil diameter over time to the end of cataract surgery.

Secondary endpoints will be maximum intraoperative pupil constriction, subjects with pupil diameter less than 6.5 mm at any during surgery, subjects with pupil less than 6.0 mm during cortical clean-up, and subjects with greater than 2.5 mm of pupillary constriction at any time during surgery.

Enrollment

59 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients who are older than 18 years of age

  • Patients who are planned to undergo bilateral cataract surgery

  • Patients with baseline IOP of 5 - 22 mm Hg

  • Medicare insurance*

    • There is a significant cost difference between our two study drugs. Therefore, Medicare insurance is part of our inclusion criteria, because there is a pass-through reimbursement in place to cover the cost of phenylephrine/ketorolac. Other insurances (for example, Aetna Better Health, Highmark Freedom, Gateway) have variable or poor coverage for phenylephrine/ketorolac, which would leave the medical center responsible for the cost. Patients can never be held responsible for the cost of the medication because it is included in "covered services" for cataract surgery billing.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients who are planned to undergo only unilateral cataract surgery
  • Patients who are planned to undergo cataract surgery and another surgical procedure in the same operation (eg. combined cataract and glaucoma surgery)
  • Patients with concurrent clinically significant disease, connective tissue disease, abnormal blood pressure at screening, narrow-angle or unstable glaucoma or treatment with prostaglandins, uncontrolled chronic eye disease or active corneal pathology or scarring
  • Patients with history of iritis or trauma with iris damage
  • Patients with recent eye surgery (non-laser surgery within 3 months or laser surgery within 30 days prior to study surgery)
  • Patients with clinically significant hypersensitivity to the study medications
  • Patients who have used pilocarpine (a pupil constrictor) within 6 months prior to surgery

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

59 participants in 2 patient groups

Epinephrine
Active Comparator group
Description:
Epinephrine is the intracameral additive during cataract surgery.
Treatment:
Drug: Epinephrine
Omidria
Active Comparator group
Description:
Omidria is the intracameral additive during cataract surgery.
Treatment:
Drug: Phenylephrine-ketorolac

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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