Effects of daily and overnight wear of a novel hyper oxygen-transmissible soft contact lens on bacterial binding and corneal epithelium: A 13-month clinical trial

Harrison D Cavanagh, Patrick M. Ladage, Susanna L. Li, Kazuaki Yamamoto, Mike Molai, David H. Ren, Walter M Petroll, James V. Jester

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

96 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To test prospectively a new biologic rationale for an advanced hyper oxygen-transmissible lens (HOTL) providing prospects for safer daily (DW) or extended (EW) contact lens wear. Design: Prospective, randomized, double-masked, single-center, 13-month clinical trial. Participants: One hundred sixty-eight patients completed the DW study (1 month): control lens (n = 70); HOTL (n = 98). One hundred thirty-six patients finished 1 year of EW: controls (n = 56), HOTL (n = 25, 6 nights; n = 55, 30 nights). Testing: Irrigation chamber to collect corneal surface cells, confocal microscopy, tear collection at baseline, 2, and 4, weeks of DW, and 24 hours, 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months of EW. Main Outcome Measures: (1) Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) binding to exfoliated corneal surface cells; (2) central epithelial thickness (CET); (3) superficial cell area (SCA); (4) epithelial surface cell exfoliation (DESQ); and (5) tear lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Results: Daily wear with control lens increased PA binding from 5.90 ± 2.60 to 7.81 ± 3.04 bacteria per cell (P < 0.01); HOTL wear increased PA binding significantly less (5.31 ± 1.87-5.98 ± 2.26; P < 0.01). Daily wear produced no significant changes in CET or SCA. Significant decreases in DESQ were seen with both lenses with no significant intergroup differences. Tear LDH increased significantly in DW with HOTL wear versus control (P = 0.0017), but not after 1 month of subsequent EW (P = 0.533). One to 3 months of EW with control lens showed significantly higher PA binding than HOTL wear (P < 0.01); binding adaptively decreased thereafter, returning to baseline at 9 to 12 months. Lens EW produced significantly enlarged SCA, thinning of CET (except 6-night HOTL wear), and decreased DESQ (P < 0.01). Some adaptive recovery was seen with CET and DESQ, but not SCA; importantly, the data indicated no significant difference between 6- or 30-night EW for all outcomes. Conclusions: Hyper oxygen-transmissible lens wear (DW or EW) produced significantly decreased PA binding compared with control lens wear, with no significant difference in wearing schedule (6 nights vs. 30 nights); additionally, there was a remarkable and unexpected adaptive recovery in the first 6 months of all soft lens wear, with a return to baseline PA binding levels and partial recovery for the other outcomes except SCA at 1 year. These results suggest that HOTL use should result in a decrease in the incidence of and risk(s) for lens-related microbial keratitis and that further epidemiologic studies should consider time in adapted EW in future risk and incidence analyses.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1957-1969
Number of pages13
JournalOphthalmology
Volume109
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2002

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ophthalmology

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