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About
This double-masked multi-center trial will evaluate the association of diabetes in the cornea donor with transplant success and loss of endothelial cells through 1 year following Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK). Study eyes are assigned to receive either a cornea from a donor without diabetes or a cornea from a donor with diabetes.
Full description
This study will address concerns about the suitability of corneas from donors with diabetes for use with DMEK through a prospective, masked, multi-center clinical trial in which the donor corneas are assigned by diabetes status in the same distribution proportion (2:1 distribution of tissue from donors without diabetes to tissue from donors with diabetes) currently used in the USA. The DEKS will assess graft success and endothelial cell density through 1 year following DMEK to determine whether the surgical success rate with corneas from donors with well characterized diabetes (including post-mortem hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and advanced glycation end products (AGE) testing) is inferior to the rate with donors without diabetes. The investigators hypothesize that the majority of donor corneas from individuals with diabetes will be suitable, but that a portion of donors with a higher diabetes severity scale, and/or poorer control based on HbA1c will have a greater risk for graft failure and endothelial cell loss. This study will also examine collected skin biopsies to determine whether high levels of AGE biomarkers in donor skin tissue - which quantifies disease severity over many years (and possibly coupled with elevated HbA1c levels) - is associated with greater risk for graft failure and cell loss. This novel approach to characterization of donor tissue can provide a paradigm shift in the risk assessment of transplanted corneas from diabetic donors. The effect of recipient diabetes on keratoplasty success and cell loss will also be studied in a rigorous manner to determine the potential combined effect of donor and recipient diabetes status.
In summary, this study is designed to determine if non-diabetic donor corneas are superior to diabetic donor corneas in terms of both graft success and endothelial cell density outcomes, with an additional specific aim to determine whether donors with a higher diabetes severity scale, and/or poorer control based on HbA1c are driving the effect. This study will also determine whether a high AGE/A1c metric is also associated with the potential superiority finding and establish a novel composite score (severity score, HbA1c and AGE/A1c) based on these metrics that can be used to identify high versus low risk diabetic donors. This distinction may enable eye banks to potentially utilize the majority of donors with diabetes for EK surgery, while excluding the severely affected donors with diabetes.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Participant Inclusion Criteria:
Age range 30- < 91 years with minimum life expectancy of at least 1 year
Willingness to return to study site for follow up at 1 month and 1 year
Fluent in English or Spanish
Willingness to have fingerstick blood sample collected to determine HbA1c level at entry and at 1 year. The participant must agree to have their primary care provider contacted (or an appropriate referral provided) if they were not known to have diabetes and the HbA1c suggests they may have diabetes. Similarly, if already known to have diabetes and the HbA1c is high, the participant must agree to have their primary care provider contacted or an appropriate referral provided.
Has at least one eye clinically recommended for DMEK that is able to be scheduled for DMEK between 5 to 90 days after enrollment. If second eye is enrolled, it must be scheduled for DMEK between 7 days and 6 months after DMEK on the first eye.
Has a condition related to endothelial dysfunction which will be treated by DMEK. Eligible indications for DMEK include:
Exclusion Criteria:
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
1,097 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Loretta Szczotka-Flynn, OD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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