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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03312257
Other study ID # K23EY025273
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date July 2016
Est. completion date June 2020

Study information

Verified date November 2022
Source Ohio State University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study will test whether the combined treatment of 0.01% atropine and soft bifocal contact lens wear produces slower myopia progression and axial elongation compared to soft bifocal contact lenses alone in children ages 7 to 11 years old.


Description:

Both atropine and soft bifocal contact lenses have been shown to slow myopia progression, and both can cause changes in choroidal thickness. But the relationship between these mechanisms is unclear. The central hypothesis to be tested in the BAM Study is that atropine and soft bifocal contact lenses each exert their anti-progression actions through a common pathway that involves the choroid. If this is correct, then adding atropine treatment to soft bifocal contact lens wear will lead to a more effective slowing of myopia progression than prescribing soft bifocal contact lenses alone due to the additive effects in the common pathway. The BAM Study is an ancillary study of an NIH sponsored multi-center, randomized clinical trial, the Bifocal Lenses In Nearsighted Kids (BLINK) Study (NIH: U10EY023208; NCT: NCT02255474). The BLINK Study compares myopia progression between subjects who wear single vision contact lenses and those wearing soft bifocal contact lenses. The BAM Study enrolls an additional 49 subjects that are age-matched with the participants who are wearing +2.50D add soft bifocal contact lenses in the BLINK Study. The subjects in the BAM Study wear +2.50D add soft bifocal contact lenses in combination with daily administration of one drop of 0.01% atropine in each eye for three years. The rates of myopia progression and axial elongation will be compared to the rates in participants who are receiving treatment with +2.50D add soft bifocal contact lenses alone in the BLINK Study. Two specific aims will be addressed: Aim 1: To test whether the combined treatment of 0.01% atropine and soft bifocal contact lens wear produces slower myopia progression and axial elongation compared to soft bifocal contact lenses alone over 3 years. Aim 2: To test whether early changes in choroidal thickness can be used as predictors of long-term myopia progression / axial elongation. The results of this study will have significant implications for future studies to develop and test new therapeutic regimes that optimize the effect of myopia control through combined pharmacological and optical interventions. The outcomes will also aid in understanding the potential role of short-term changes of choroidal thickness in long- term regulation of myopia progression and ocular growth.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 49
Est. completion date June 2020
Est. primary completion date June 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 7 Years to 11 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - 7 to 11 years, inclusive, at baseline examination - -0.75 to -5.00 D, inclusive, spherical component, cycloplegic autorefraction - =1.00 DC, cycloplegic autorefraction - = 2.00 D difference between the sphere components of the two eyes (anisometropia), cycloplegic autorefraction - 0.1 logMAR or better best-corrected visual acuity in each eye - 0.1 logMAR or better visual acuity OU distance and near with a +2.50 D add contact lens - +2.50 D add lens provides adequate fit with respect to movement and centration - Finish at least 71% of 0.01% atropine during the run-in period Exclusion Criteria: - Eye disease or binocular vision problems (e.g., strabismus, amblyopia, oculomotor nerve palsies, corneal disease, etc.) - Previous intraocular or corneal surgery - Systemic disease that may affect vision, vision development, or contact lens wear (eg, diabetes, Down syndrome, etc.) - Previous gas permeable, soft bifocal, or orthokeratology contact lens wear or bifocal/PAL spectacle wear (longer than 1 month of wear) - Previous or current participation in myopia control studies - Chronic use of medications that may affect immunity, such as oral or ophthalmic corticosteroids for ocular or systemic diseases - Issues that may interfere with the ability to participate over the next 3 years

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Combination Product:
Multifocal D +2.50 add & 0.01% atropine
Biofinity Multifocal D +2.50 add is a monthly disposable contact lens commercially available from CooperVision; 0.01% atropine is low-dose atropine compounded by local pharmacy.

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Jenny Jones

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Refractive Error Progression Refractive error, as measured by cycloplegic autorefraction in both eyes, will be measured yearly to assess the difference in progression between the combination treatment (+2.50 D add soft bifocal lens and 0.01% atropine) group and the historical control group (+2.50 D add soft bifocal lens only) in the BLINK Study. 3 years
Secondary Axial Length Progression Axial length progression, as measured by Lenstar in both eyes, will be measured yearly to assess the difference in progression between the combination treatment (+2.50 D add soft bifocal lens and 0.01% atropine) group and the historical control group (+2.50 D add soft bifocal lens only) in the BLINK Study. 3 years
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