Eye Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pilot Validation Study of Computer Administration of Vision Targeted Quality of Life Instruments
This study will test and compare computerized and paper versions of eye questionnaires.
Questionnaires are used in medicine to gain a better understanding of how a disease can
impact a person's quality of life. Computerized versions of such questionnaires are often as
good as or better than paper versions, but there has been no direct comparison of the two.
This study may help in the development of eye questionnaires used to understand symptoms and
monitor patients in clinical trials.
People 21 years of age and older with ocular surface disease (OSD) and matched control
subjects without OSD may be eligible for this study. All participants undergo the following
procedures:
- Medical and eye history.
- Vision test and examination of the front part of the eye.
- Tear measurement: A small piece of paper is placed on the surface of the eye to measure
the amount of tears produced. The consistency of the tears is measured by looking at how
fast they evaporate from the surface of the eye.
- Completion of either paper-based or computer-based version of a questionnaire 15 minutes
after the eye examination and completion of the other version within 1 week at home.
(Subjects who complete the paper version in the clinic are told how to access the
computer version online at home or on a library computer; those who complete the
computer version in the clinic are given a paper version to take home.)
The purpose of this protocol is to compare the health-related quality of life (visual
function) reported by participants when using web-based questionnaires versus their responses
obtained when using standard paper versions of the questionnaires. This comparison will be
performed in a population of patients diagnosed with ocular surface disease (OSD) and in age-
and gender-matched controls by using a randomized, cross-over study design. This type of
comparative study of patient-reported outcomes has been reported for rheumatology,
cardiology, psychiatry, asthma, alcoholism, pain assessment, gastrointestinal disease,
diabetes, and allergy populations; however, to our knowledge there have been no reports of
such a study from patients with ocular disease. The study will evaluate the agreement between
scores reported via two modes of administration: a web-based version and a paper-and-pencil
version. Components of three questionnaires commonly used to evaluate visual function,
symptoms, and vision-related quality of life in OSD will be included: the initial 5 questions
of the Ocular Surface Index (OSDI), question #15 of the National Eye Institute Visual
Functioning Questionnaire - 25 (VFQ-25), and specified domains of the National Eye Institute
Refractive Error Quality Of Life Instrument-42 (RQL-42) (clarity of vision, near vision, far
vision, glare, symptoms, worry, and satisfaction with correction).
The study will also evaluate whether there are differences in mean overall score by age,
gender, order of administration, or disease severity.
Ocular surface disease, which includes dry eye disease secondary to a variety of etiologies,
is an ophthalmic condition which places a burden not just on functional vision, but also on
overall health related quality of life (HRQoL), with an impact similar to that of moderate
angina3. This study will add to the body of knowledge in the field of patient-reported
outcome measures (PROs), and will be the first to compare the computerized, web-based and
paper-based versions of previously validated questionnaires used to assess QoL in subjects
with ocular disease.
There has been an increasing interest in assessing PROs in many fields of medicine,
especially in the context of clinical trials where HRQoL is an important component of the
overall evaluation of an intervention or treatment. As the use of computers increases and
accessibility to the internet broadens, there is a tremendous potential in harnessing this
technology in the future as a cost-effective, efficient way to gather clinical data on PROs
for future ophthalmic clinical trials and studies.
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