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Effect of MiYOSMART iQ Spectacle Lenses on Myopia Progression in Children

H

Hoya Lens Rus LLC

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Myopia, Child Myopia Progression

Treatments

Device: MiYOSMART iQ spectacle lenses

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry
Other

Identifiers

NCT07387159
MIYOSMART-iQ-OFT-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

This prospective, single-center study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of MiYOSMART iQ spectacle lenses with DIMS (Defocus Incorporated Multiple Segments) and Triple Enhanced Design (TED) technology in slowing myopia progression in children aged 8-11 years.

35 children with myopia (spherical equivalent -0.5 to -6.0 D) will be prescribed MiYOSMART iQ lenses and followed for 6 months. The study will compare changes in spherical equivalent refraction and axial length against a historical control group (n=35) using ANCOVA. Secondary outcomes include measurements of peripheral refraction and contrast sensitivity at the first prescription.

The study hypothesis is that wearing MiYOSMART iQ lenses for 6 months significantly slows myopia progression compared to single-vision spectacle correction.

Full description

Introduction and Scientific Rationale Progressive myopia in children is a global public health problem associated with an increased risk of ocular pathology in adulthood. Existing myopia control methods demonstrate efficacy, but there is a need for additional non-pharmacological, non-invasive approaches with a high safety profile and patient acceptability.

MiYOSMART iQ spectacle lenses with DIMS and Triple Enhanced Design (TED) technology represent a modern method of optical myopia control, based on the concept of peripheral myopic defocus.

The efficacy of MiYOSMART lenses has been proven in a number of studies, primarily in Asian populations. However, some physiological aspects of their effect, especially in Caucasian populations and in real-world clinical practice, require further study:

Insufficient data on the precise pattern of induced peripheral defocus when using open-field instruments.

Lack of studies on the effect of defocus segments on contrast sensitivity.

Need for evaluation of key parameter dynamics (refraction, AL) in Russian children.

Scientific Hypothesis: Wearing MiYOSMART iQ spectacles for 6 months leads to a statistically significant slowing of myopia progression (by SE and AL) compared to historical control and causes characteristic, measurable changes in peripheral refraction and contrast sensitivity parameters, detectable at first prescription.

Study Objectives and Endpoints

- Primary Objective To evaluate the effect of MiYOSMART iQ spectacle lenses on myopia progression after 6 months of wear compared to a historical control group.

Primary Endpoints:

Change in Spherical Equivalent of refraction (SE, D) under cycloplegia (Visit 3 - Visit 1).

Change in Axial Length (AL, mm) (Visit 3 - Visit 1).

- Secondary Objectives

To characterize the state of the visual system at the first prescription of MiYOSMART iQ lens correction.

Endpoint 1: Peripheral refraction (D) indicators at various retinal points, measured with an open-field autorefractometer without correction and with new spectacles at Visit 2.

Endpoint 2: Spatial contrast sensitivity (log units) indicators for various spatial frequencies, measured with the "Mesotest" device in a trial frame and with new spectacles at Visit 2.

To assess the tolerability and safety of MiYOSMART iQ lens correction over 6 months.

Endpoint: Frequency, nature, and severity of all recorded Adverse Events (AEs) and Device Deficiencies (DDs).

Study Design and Methodology

  • Overall Design. Prospective, interventional, single-center study with a historical control group. Responsibility for conduct and scientific supervision rests with the Principal Investigator - Elena P. Tarutta.
  • Visits and Procedures. The overall schedule is presented below.

Visit 1 (Day 0, Baseline): Informed Consent, Medical History; Visual Acuity (uncorrected, with habitual and optimal correction); Autorefractometry (narrow/wide pupil); Biometry (Axial Length); Binocular Vision, Phoria, AC/A Ratio; Choroidal Thickness Measurement; Recording of Adverse Events/Device Deficiencies.

Visit 2 (within 3±1 weeks after V1): Visual Acuity with new MiYOSMART iQ spectacles; Contrast Sensitivity (Mesotest) in trial frame and new spectacles; Peripheral Refraction without correction and with new spectacles; Dispensing of MiYOSMART iQ spectacles; Recording of Adverse Events/Device Deficiencies.

Visit 3 (Month 6±1 after V1): Visual Acuity with MiYOSMART iQ spectacles; Autorefractometry; Biometry (Axial Length); Binocular Vision, Phoria, AC/A Ratio; Choroidal Thickness Measurement; Recording of Adverse Events/Device Deficiencies.

- Historical Control Group. Formed retrospectively from the research center's database. Includes patients who met the current study criteria and used single-vision spectacle correction for at least 6 months. Groups will be matched by age (±1 year) and baseline SE (±0.5 D).

Enrollment

70 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

8 to 11 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 8-11 years (inclusive)
  • Myopia: spherical equivalent -0.5 to -6.0 D under cycloplegia
  • No previous myopia control treatment
  • Orthophoria, presence of binocular vision

Exclusion criteria

  • Corrected visual acuity < 0.8 (decimal)
  • Anisometropia > 2.0 D
  • Strabismus history or presence
  • Previous refractive or intraocular surgery

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 2 patient groups

MiYOSMART iQ intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
DIMS with Triple Enhanced Design technology
Treatment:
Device: MiYOSMART iQ spectacle lenses
Historical control group
No Intervention group
Description:
Retrospective data from patients with single-vision spectacle correction

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Nikolai Makukha; Elena Tarutta, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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