Amblyopia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Trial Comparing Patching With Active Vision Therapy to Patching With Control Vision Therapy as Treatment for Amblyopia in Children 7 to <13 Years Old
This study is comparing the effectiveness of patching combined with active vision therapy
plus near activities versus patching combined with control vision therapy plus near
activities for moderate amblyopia (20/40-20/100) in 7 to <13 year olds.
The primary outcome measure is the proportion of patients with visual acuity of 20/25 or
better in the amblyopic eye at the 17-week masked exam. These patients will be considered
treatment responders. The primary analysis will consist of a comparison between the 2
treatment groups of the proportion of treatment responders with adjustment for baseline
visual acuity.
Secondary outcomes are stereoacuity at the 17-week masked exam, mean improvement in visual
acuity at the 17-week masked exam, and rate of improvement of visual acuity.
Patching and atropine have been traditionally used for the improvement of visual acuity in
children with amblyopia. Previous studies have shown that these methods of treatment are
effective in young children with functional amblyopia. More recently ATS3, a randomized
clinical trial of 507 children ages 7-<18, found that part-time patching combined with
atropine and near activities improved visual acuity by two or more lines in 53% of the 7 to
12 year olds compared to 25% for optical correction alone. For the 13 to 17 year olds,
part-time patching and near activities improved visual acuity by 2 or more lines in 25%,
compared to 23% for optical correction alone. While it appears that patching and/or
atropine, combined with near activities, can improve visual acuity in some patients ages
7-<18, most patients in the study were left with residual visual acuity deficits. To further
improve visual acuity and binocularity in children with amblyopia some eye care providers
augment these traditional therapies with vision therapy. Vision therapy is prescribed
initially if there is moderate amblyopia with stereopsis. Vision therapy can be added to the
treatment regimen once the patient has reached moderate levels of vision loss with
stereopsis and if the patient is still not responding to the current treatment and still has
moderate amblyopia. It is thought that the best candidates for this type of therapy are
those children with a minimum level of stereopsis (at least 800") and without constant
strabismus. Those children with no stereopsis would not be able to perform the activities in
the later stages of therapy utilizing binocular vision.
Vision therapy is a sequence of prescribed activities typically performed on a daily basis
at home and weekly in-office, and is directed toward an individual patient's deficient
skills. Visual skills are practiced under conditions that provide the patient with feedback.
The feedback, along with a gradual increase in the demand of the activities as improvement
occurs, enables the patient to improve visual functions such as visual acuity, fixation,
accommodation, and vergence skills.
There have been case reports and small sample studies that have shown that vision therapy in
combination with spectacles and occlusion is effective in improving the visual acuity of
patients with amblyopia. Wick et al looked at nineteen patients who were diagnosed with
anisometropic amblyopia between the ages of 6 to 49. Seventeen of the patients had moderate
amblyopia and two had severe amblyopia, based on the definition of amblyopia used in the
Amblyopia Treatment Studies. The patients were treated with a sequence that included
spectacle correction, occlusion therapy and both monocular and binocular vision therapy.
Thirteen of the seventeen patients with moderate amblyopia had a final visual acuity of
20/25 or better and all of the patients with moderate amblyopia had 20/30 or better final
visual acuity.
More recent reports on "perceptual learning," an active form of therapy in which amblyopic
subjects practice a position-discrimination task, have shown a mean acuity improvement of
approximately 30% (two lines) in amblyopic children and adults who had completed occlusion
therapy. These studies provide support for the notion that the practice of particular visual
skills under conditions that provide the patient with feedback (e.g., vision therapy) may be
beneficial in improving the visual performance of amblyopic eyes.
The second reason to prescribe active therapy is to enhance or facilitate the effects of
occlusion by directly treating the aforementioned deficits found to be associated with
amblyopia. Most therapy procedures are designed to remediate specific deficiencies in four
main areas: fixation, spatial perception, accommodative efficiency, binocular function and
oculomotor control.
Lastly, some investigators have suggested that the use of vision therapy may reduce the
likelihood of recurrence of the amblyopia. This may be particularly true with anisometropic
amblyopia in which vision therapy can be used to improve binocular function.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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