Nasolacrimal Duct Obstruction Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Trial Comparing Immediate Probing in an Office Setting With Deferred Probing in a Facility Setting for Treatment of Nasolacrimal Duct Obstruction in Children 6 to <10 Months Old
The purpose of this study is:
To determine the cost-effectiveness of treating NLDO using immediate office probing compared
with deferred probing in a facility setting. As part of the primary objective, the study
will determine the proportion of eyes experiencing spontaneous resolution among subjects
randomized to the deferred probing group.
The secondary objectives are:
1. To determine the success proportion for eyes undergoing immediate office probing as an
initial procedure.
2. To determine the success proportion for eyes undergoing deferred facility probing as an
initial procedure.
Nasolacrimal duct obstruction (NLDO) is a common ocular condition in the first year of life.
Many cases will resolve spontaneously or with massage. Many studies of primary treatment of
NLDO have been reported, however these case series have largely been retrospective,
uncontrolled, and conducted in single centers. The substantial uncertainty regarding an
estimate of spontaneous resolution is a primary reason for conducting the current study.
Probing is the most widely-used initial treatment for NLDO in infancy. Our group recently
completed a prospective observational study which found a 78% success proportion of probing
among children aged 6 to <12 months. Other estimates of the success rate for probing vary
between 69% and 92%.
Two differing approaches to nasolacrimal probing have been most often been used: (1)
immediate office probing (early probing - generally soon after 6 months of age) and (2)
medical management (episodic antibiotic eye drops with massage of the lacrimal sac) until
9-13 months of age followed by probing under general anesthesia or conscious sedation
(deferred probing). The advantages of early probing are the avoidance of general anesthesia
or conscious sedation, immediate resolution of symptoms, fewer physician visits, fewer
antibiotic prescriptions, lesser cost per procedure, and possible prevention of fibrosis
from inflammation in the nasolacrimal duct. The advantages of deferred probing include more
subject comfort with the procedure and possible avoidance of a surgical procedure
completely.
The optimal approach to the management of NLDO in the first year of life remains uncertain.
Our prospective observational data suggest a slightly reduced chance of success with
immediate office probing (75% for office probing, 80% for facility probing), however,
immediate office probing may be more cost-effective even if the proportion with success is
lower. For a subject undergoing a single operation, immediate office probing is less
expensive than deferred probing in a facility because there is no fee for anesthesia, the
facility, or for medications prescribed during the pre-operative observation period. Some
portion of this lower cost would be offset however by the additional cost of a second
procedure if the initial office probing is not successful. Deferred facility probing is more
expensive per procedure; however, the overall costs are reduced by the number of children
whose NLDO spontaneously resolves while waiting to perform the procedure in a facility.
The study is a randomized clinical trial which aims to determine the cost-effectiveness of
treating NLDO using immediate office probing compared with deferred probing in a facility
setting. As part of the primary objective, the study will determine the proportion of eyes
experiencing spontaneous resolution among subjects randomized to the deferred probing group.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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