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The purpose of the study is to establish whether Bimatoprost eye drops are effective in reducing proptosis in inactive thyroid eye disease (TED) patients and improving quality of life in patients with TED. Current standard NHS treatment/care for inactive TED is artificial tears (used as the placebo in this study) or surgery if appropriate.
The IMP is Bimatoprost eye drops PGF2α (0.03%). This is already licensed eye drops usually used for glaucoma. Therefore the current trial's indication is outside its licenced indication. The Investigational Medicinal Product (IMP) will be used according to its licenced dosage and form. This is the first time that Bimatoprost will be used in the treatment of TED
Full description
Thyroid eye disease (TED) is a chronic disfiguring and debilitating disease of the eyes which can lead to sight loss in severe cases. Patients with TED frequently have characteristic eyeball protrusion (proptosis) due to increased fat accumulation behind the eye. The discomfort and changes in appearance of the eyes is a source of severe psychological distress and impaired quality of life in many patients. Current treatments for TED are unsatisfactory and established non-surgical therapies which specifically reduce proptosis are lacking. Reduced eyelid protrusion has recently been reported as a side-effect of the use of prostaglandin analogue eye drops (e.g. Bimatoprost (PGF2-alpha)) in the routine treatment of glaucoma and we have laboratory data showing inhibition of fat cells by Bimatoprost. Hence PGF2-alpha eye drops potentially represent a simple, non-invasive low toxicity topical alternative to surgery in TED. However no clinical trials of Bimatoprost have been conducted in TED to date. The objective of this study is to determine whether Bimatoprost eye drops are effective in reducing proptosis and thus improving quality of life in patients with TED. Trial participants will be recruited from the TED clinic at the University Hospital Wales. The clinic is a regional referral centre for the treatment and study of TED and is run by a multidisciplinary team of ophthalmologists, endocrinologists, and orthoptists with expertise in TED. Following informed consent, participants will be randomised to receive Bimatoprost or placebo eye drops for three months after which they will undergo a two month drug washout period before switching to the opposite treatment in the final three months of study. The primary endpoint is a change in standardised measurements of proptosis while secondary endpoints will include changes in quality of life scores. This study will provide evidence for a novel application of bimatoprost in patients with TED.
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31 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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