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Discontinuation of Lens Wear in New Ortho-k Children (DOEE2)

T

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Myopia

Treatments

Device: single-vision glasses
Device: ortho-k lenses

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT01236755
H-ZG50-2

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims at investigating the efficacy of myopic control using ortho-k in younger and older children.

Full description

Children wearing ortho-k have been shown to have slower rate of myopic progression than those wearing single-vision spectacles (Cho et al. 2005) or soft lenses (Walline et al. 2009). Younger myopic children (aged 6-10 years old) may have the faster increase in myopia than old myopic children (aged 11-15 years old), i.e. the rate of myopic progression may be different in different age groups and in children with different refractive status (Edwards 1999; Fan et al. 2004; Cheng et al. 2007). Although the refractive correction with ortho-k has been well documented, it is unknown whether the efficiency and reversibility of ortho-k for myopic reduction as well as myopic control are similar in children of different age and refractive groups.

In this 14-month study, the eyeball length in 45 younger (6-10 years old) and 45 older (11-15 years old) myopic children before and after ortho-k will be evaluated. Eyeball elongation will be determined for the first 7 months when single-vision glasses will be prescribed (Phase I) and the next 7 months when ortho-k will be prescribed (Phase I). Rate of myopic progression will be determined and compared between the two groups of children in the two phases.

Enrollment

91 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 15 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age: between 6 to 15 years old
  • Myopia: between 1.50D and 4.50D in at least one eye
  • Spherical equivalent (SE): between -1.00D to -4.50D in both eyes
  • Astigmatism: ≤ 3.00D of axes 180 +/- 30 or ≤ 1.00D of other axes; and the amount is less than refractive sphere
  • Anisometropia: ≤ 1.50D in both refractive sphere, refractive cylinder and SE
  • Best corrected monocular visual acuity: equal to or better than 0.10 in logMAR scale in both eyes
  • Willingness to wear contact lenses or spectacles on a daily basis
  • Can obtain good ortho-k results with the study lenses
  • Availability for follow-up for at least 14 months

Exclusion criteria

  • Strabismus at distance or near
  • Contraindication for contact lens wear and ortho-k (e.g. limbus to limbus corneal cylinder and dislocated corneal apex
  • Systemic or ocular conditions which may affect contact lens wear (e.g. allergy and medication)
  • Systemic or ocular conditions which may affect refractive development (e.g. Down syndrome, ptosis)
  • Prior experience with the use of rigid lenses (including ortho-k)
  • Prior experience with myopia control treatment (e.g. refractive therapy or progressive spectacles)
  • Non-compliance to the follow up schedule
  • Non-compliance to the use of the prescribed optical correction
  • Poor ocular response to ortho-k lens wear
  • Significant residual refractive error after ortho-k treatment resulting in poor unaided vision (worse than 0.18 in logMAR scale)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

91 participants in 1 patient group

ortho-k lenses
Experimental group
Description:
Children were switched to wear ortho-k lenses for 7 months after wearing single-vision glasses for 7 months
Treatment:
Device: ortho-k lenses
Device: single-vision glasses

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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