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Mechanisms of Light-based Therapies for Dry Eye Disease (MOLT)

A

Aston University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Meibomian Gland Dysfunction
Dry Eye Syndromes

Treatments

Device: Actual IPL
Device: LLLT
Device: Sham IPL

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06004895
HLS21118

Details and patient eligibility

About

Dry eye disease is a common condition affecting millions worldwide and costing millions in healthcare due to reduced work productivity and quality of life. The disruption of oil glands in our eyelids known as Meibomian glands, which produce the oily layer of our tears to protect it from evaporating, is one of the most common contributors of dry eye disease. Much effort has been put into developing effective treatments for this condition as new treatments are constantly being introduced to the market.

The purpose of this clinical trial is to investigate how proven light-based therapies work in treating dry eye disease and oil gland disruption. These therapies include intense-pulsed light therapy (IPL) which uses a series of light flashes on the facial skin surface, and low-level light therapy (LLLT) which uses a mask with a series of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to warm the body cells. The main questions it aims to answer are:

  1. What are the short- and long-term changes associated with these treatments on the eyelids and surface of the eyes?
  2. Does LLLT alone work better than IPL+LLLT in treating dry eye disease and oil gland disruption?

Participants with dry eye disease and oil gland disruption will receive four treatments with these light-based therapies each separated by two to three weeks apart, and followed up two to three weeks and three months after the final treatment session. One eye of the participant will receive intense pulsed light together with low-level light therapy, while the other eye will receive only low-level light therapy with a sham intense pulsed light treatment so that the researchers can compare if clinical signs and symptoms improve in one eye more than the other.

Full description

This study will be a randomized, double-masked, paired-eye clinical study to assess the potential difference in impact between the two treatment modalities. Each eye of the participant will be randomized to receive either IPL+LLLT or sham IPL+LLLT. The whole study involves a total of 6 visits (consisting of 4 treatment visits, and 2 follow-up visits). All visits will be conducted at the Aston Dry Eye Clinic in Aston University, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Enrollment

26 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Individuals with dry eye disease symptoms (Ocular Surface Disease Index questionnaire (OSDI) score ≥ 13 or Dry Eye Questionnaire (DEQ5) score > 6) and signs (tear film instability measured with non-invasive tear break-up time < 10 s or ocular surface damage measured using special dyes placed on the front surface of the eyes that temporarily stains any aggravated or damaged cells: > 5 corneal spots, > 9 conjunctival spots or lid margin staining ≥ 2mm in length and ≥ 25% in width) (Wolffsohn et al., 2017)
  • Individuals need to also have Meibomian gland dysfunction. The diagnosis of Meibomian gland dysfunction depends on how many of 5 glands in the central lower eyelid can express oil, and the quality of the oil. A diagnosis is made if there is decreased expressibility (grade 1-3 on the Pflugfelder scale) and reduced quality of oil (grade 1-3 on Bron scale). Any presence of gland blockage and/or loss of oil glands grade 2 to grade 4 of either eyelid [Pult and Reide-Pult, 2013]) will also justify a diagnosis of Meibomian gland dysfunction
  • Age ≥ 18 years, male or female
  • Able to provide written consent in English
  • Able to attend multiple visits (4 treatment visits) and followed up for 2 weeks and 3 months after final treatment

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy
  • Contraindications to IPL treatment (Individuals with darker skin types - Fitzpatrick skin type V or VI, photosensitive epilepsy, tattoos, implants, electrical or acoustic prosthetics, semi-permanent make-up, pigmented lesions or skin cancer in the treatment area, pacemakers, use of photosensitising medication the past 3 months or during treatment period)
  • Facial or ocular IPL or LLLT treatment within the past 6 months or during study period in addition to those provided in the study
  • Use of topical medical eyedrops in the past 3 months or during study period
  • Contact lens wear in the past 2 weeks or during study period
  • Systemic conditions that can cause dry eye disease or corneal nerve loss including diabetes and Sjögren's syndrome
  • Other active ocular surface diseases or history of ocular surgery or corneal infections
  • Individuals with 1 eye

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

26 participants in 2 patient groups

Actual IPL and LLLT
Experimental group
Description:
IPL and LLLT will be administered using the Espansione Group Ltd Eye-light unit. Five pulses of IPL will be administered along the lower lid region of the eye after the Pult meiboscore and Fitzpatrick skin grading has been entered into the unit. LLLT consisting of a wearable facial mask with red LEDs is then administered for 15 minutes.
Treatment:
Device: LLLT
Device: Actual IPL
Sham IPL and LLLT
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Sham IPL will be administered by placing a separate empty IPL cartridge on the lower eyelid regions of the patient's other eye while a working IPL cartridge (Espansione Group Ltd Eye-light unit) simulates a light pulse pointed away from the patient's face, after entering the Pult meiboscore and Fitzpatrick skin grading into the unit. Five simulated pulses will be administered. LLLT consisting of a wearable facial mask with red LEDs is then administered for 15 minutes.
Treatment:
Device: LLLT
Device: Sham IPL

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jeremy Chung Bo Chiang, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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