Amblyopia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Trial Comparing Daily Atropine Versus Weekend Atropine
The goals of this study are:
- To compare the visual acuity outcome in the amblyopic eye after 17 weeks of daily use
of atropine versus weekend-only use of atropine.
- To compare the proportion of patients achieving a complete treatment response (defined
as amblyopic eye acuity >20/25 or equal to that of the sound eye in the absence of a
reduction in the sound eye acuity from baseline) with daily atropine versus
weekend-only atropine.
Amblyopia is the most common cause of monocular visual impairment in both children and young
and middle-aged adults. Patching has been the mainstay of amblyopia therapy. It is generally
held that the response to treatment is best when it is instituted at an early age and is
poor when attempted after eight years of age.
The study 'Occlusion versus Pharmacologic Therapy for Moderate Amblyopia', a randomized
trial of 419 children meeting entry criteria similar to the current study, found that both
atropine 1% (one drop daily) and patching (6 hours to full time daily) produced visual
acuity improvement of similar magnitude and that both are appropriate treatment modalities
for the management of moderate amblyopia in children. Patching has the potential advantage
of a more rapid improvement in visual acuity and possibly a slightly better acuity outcome,
whereas atropine has the potential advantage of easier administration and lower cost.
Through its cycloplegic effect, atropine prevents accommodation, blurring the sound eye at
near fixation. The blurring effect can be augmented by reducing the spectacle correction of
hyperopia in the sound eye. The cycloplegic effect lasts at least partially for a week or
longer. Therefore, some pediatric eye care providers believe that daily use of atropine is
unnecessary and treatment may be effective at a dosage of as little as once a week. One
advantage of less frequent dosing is a potential reduction in side effects, including any
potential adverse effect on the vision in the sound eye (reverse amblyopia), on ocular
alignment, and on binocularity. The current study will assess whether prescribing atropine
once a day produces a better visual outcome than does atropine used only on the two weekend
days.
In the 'Occlusion versus Pharmacologic Therapy for Moderate Amblyopia' study, the 6-month
outcome data showed that more patients treated with atropine had a reduction in visual
acuity of 1 or more lines in the sound eye than did patients treated with patching. Visual
acuity was decreased from baseline by 1 line in 15% of the atropine group compared with 7%
of the patching group and by 2 or more lines in 9% of the atropine group and 1% of the
patching group. Only one patient (in the atropine group) was actively treated for a presumed
treatment-related decrease in sound eye acuity, with return of acuity to its baseline level.
Some of the cases of reduced acuity were unequivocally due to the use of improper refractive
correction for the sound eye testing (including nine cases in which the testing was done
with a plano lens prescribed for therapeutic effect rather than the proper corrective lens).
In other cases, we speculated that there was a residual cycloplegic effect of atropine
combined with improper refractive correction related to previously latent hyperopia becoming
manifest hyperopia during the period of atropine treatment, although there were not data to
fully document this in all cases. All 47 atropine group patients with a decrease of one or
more lines at six months have had subsequent follow-up exams. Acuity on the subsequent
testing was the same or better than that at baseline in 42 of the 47 patients: 22 while
still on atropine treatment (11 with the same refractive correction and 11 with a different
refractive correction) and 20 after atropine was discontinued (6 with the same refractive
correction and 14 with a different refractive correction). In the other five patients,
acuity on subsequent testing was decreased from baseline by one line (3 on atropine, 2 off
atropine). Thus, there did not appear to be a long-term safety concern for atropine, but the
data were inconclusive as to whether atropine caused an actual, though transient,
treatment-related decrease in sound eye acuity. One of the objectives of the current study
will be to provide additional data on the effect of atropine on the sound eye.
The study is a randomized trial comparing atropine regimes for children with moderate
amblyopia. It will consist of about 160 children. Patients in the daily atropine group
receive atropine 1% one drop daily in the sound eye. Patients in the weekend atropine group
will receive atropine 1% twice a week (Saturday and Sunday) in the sound eye. Visual acuity
is the major study outcome. It is measured after 17 weeks of treatment with either daily or
weekend atropine.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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