View clinical trials related to Dry Eye Disease.
Filter by:Prospective controlled pilot study to compare the outcome of ProKera® (PK) and conventional treatment in patients with moderate to severe Dry Eye Disease (DED)
The purpose of this study is to evaluate a new instrument that takes digital images of tear film (a thin film that coats the eye that is made up of oil and water). The investigators are interested in measuring how the thickness of the tear film varies through time. The goal is to develop a technique that may enable non-invasive evaluation of Dry Eye Disease for future clinical diagnosis.
Evaluate the efficacy and safety of Lifitegrast in subjects with dry eye disease and a recent history of artificial tear use.
The investigators hypothesize that oral omega-3-acid triglyceride form will decrease dry-eye related symptoms as well as clinical markers associated with dry eye disease (TearOsmolarity, Schirmer-1 test values, corneal staining, and fluorescein tear break-up time) when compared to administration of placebo.
This is a Phase 2/3 study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of 2 different dose concentrations of OTX-101 dosed twice a day in both eyes for 84 days compared to placebo (vehicle) in patients with keratoconjunctivitis sicca (dry eye disease).
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of P-321 Ophthalmic Solution in subjects with mild to moderate dry eye disease.
This research study is looking to see if in vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM) imaging can be used to confirm clinical findings (which are noted by the doctor during an eye exam) and measure the immune response to the inflammation in the subject's cornea (the front part of the eyeball). Additionally, this study is trying to determine the effectiveness of two eye-drops, Lotemax and artificial tears, in treating the inflammation associated with DED by measuring changes in immune cells with IVCM imaging. The subject will be treated with either Lotemax (loteprednol) or artificial tears (a lubricating eye drop with no medication). Lotemax is an FDA-approved steroid eye-drop that is often used to treat inflammation associated with DED. Artificial tears are approved by the FDA for treatment of dryness associated with DED. Thus, this study is designed to determine the effects of the administration of a topical steroid, Lotemax, over a treatment period of 6 weeks, using novel methods of detecting efficacy. In order to achieve the aforementioned goal, subjects will be prospectively randomized to one of two treatment arms - Lotemax or artificial tear. Both groups will follow the same study schedule.
This observational pilot-study is intended to collect outcome data from a cohort of 30 patients suffering from hyper-evaporative dry eye disease who are treated with the medical device NovaTears® eye drops for a duration of 5 to 7 weeks.
In vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM) is a sensitive imaging tool for detecting dry eye-associated subclinical inflammation. Studies have previously shown that IVCM provides an in vivo metric to measure inflammatory changes in the central cornea. The objective of the current study is to assess inflammatory response changes in the peripheral cornea and the conjunctiva by analyzing epithelial immune cell density and morphology in these areas and then correlating the IVCM findings to clinical signs and symptoms to establish novel objective imaging biomarkers.
A pilot study to evaluate the impact of Lotemax® Gel (loteprednol etabonate ophthalmic gel 0.5%) on the initiation of Restasis® (cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%) therapy in subjects with dry eye.