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Bromfenac Versus Dexamethasone After Cataract Surgery

Bromfenac 0.09% Versus Dexamethasone 0.1% Ophthalmic Solutions to Reduce Inflammation After Cataract Surgery

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03317847
Acronym
BVD
Enrollment
92
Registered
2017-10-23
Start date
2017-10-16
Completion date
2019-12-21
Last updated
2025-06-25

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Inflammation Eye

Brief summary

The aim of the study is to compare bromfenac to dexamethasone eye drops to control inflammation after cataract surgery. Inflammation in the anterior chamber of the eye will be measured by a Laser Flare Photometer (LFP).

Detailed description

The BVD study is a phase IV, single centre, randomized, active-control, parallel design, open-label trial comparing Bromfenac ophthalmic solution 0.1% and Dexamethasone ophthalmic suspension 0.1% in patients older than 60 years after unilateral cataract surgery. A total of 76 patients (38 for each arm) will be included in this study. Patients will be selected among subjects who underwent cataract surgery the day before the study enrolment. Enrolment will take place at the participating hospital. Eligible subjects will be sequentially assigned, according to a computer-generated randomization list (1:1), to one of the following treatment groups: * Experimental Arm: Bromfenac ophthalmic solution 0.1% eye drops, 2 times per day in the study eye for two weeks; * Standard Arm: Dexamethasone ophthalmic suspension 0.1% eye drops, 4 times per day in the study eye for the first week and 2 times per day in the study eye for the second week. Each group must start the drops the day after cataract surgery, for two weeks. The first post-operative clinical evaluation is planned the day after cataract surgery. The following procedures will be performed on the study eye and data will be collected during this first clinical encounter: * Eye Drops Usage training * Concomitant medications * Best-corrected Visual Acuity * Laser Flare Photometry * Slit lamp biomicroscopy * Intracular pressure (IOP) with pneumotonometer, * Dilated fundus ophthalmoscopy * Ocular Comfort Grading Assessment At least six post-operative follow-up visits are planned after 3, 7, 9, 11, 14 days (±1 day) and 30 days (±3 days) from cataract extraction plus possible adjunctive controls if problems/complications will occur. The following procedures will be performed on the study eye and data will be collected during all clinical encounters: * Compliance with study medication * Concomitant medications * Best-corrected Visual Acuity (only day 7, 14, 30) * Laser Flare Photometry * Optical Coherence Tomography testing (only day 30) * Slit lamp biomicroscopy (only day 7, 14 and 30) * IOP with pneumotonometer (only day 7, 14 and 30) * Dilated fundus ophthalmoscopy (only day 30) * Ocular Comfort Grading Assessment (only day 7, 14 and 30) * Adverse events

Interventions

Patients will self-administer 1 drop of Bromfenac twice daily to the affected eye beginning 1 day after cataract surgery and then continuing through the first 14 days of the postoperative period.

Patients will self-administer 1 drop of Dexamethasone to the study eye beginning 1 day after cataract surgery 4 times daily during the first postoperative week and 2 times daily in the second postoperative week.

Sponsors

Azienda USL Reggio Emilia - IRCCS
Lead SponsorOTHER_GOV

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
60 Years to 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Age \> 60 year old. 2. Uneventful cataract surgery. Surgical procedure, as described in the patients chart, should be free of any form of intraoperative complication that may increase postoperative inflammation. 3. Availability of relevant ocular history, including: Best Corrected Visual Acuity testing, Laser Flare Photometry, Optical Coherence Tomography, slit lamp biomicroscopy, intraocular pressure (with pneumotonometer), dilated fundus ophthalmoscopy. 4. Ability and willing to follow all instructions and attend all study visits 5. Ability to self-administer study drug (or have a caregiver available to instill all doses of study drug) 6. Ability and willing to provide informed consent for this study protocol. 7. No ocular, topical, systemic, or inhaled NSAIDs or ocular, topical, or systemic gentamicin, or cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion within 1 week of investigational product initiation or throughout the duration of the study; 8. No topical, inhaled, or systemic corticosteroids within 15 days or depot corticosteroids within 45 days of the investigational product initiation or or throughout the duration of the study; 9. No oral tamsulosin at any time during the clinical trial; 10. Any ocular, topical, or systemic medication that could interfere with normal lacrimation, wound healing, the investigational product, or the interpretation of clinical trial results. 11. For women, the menopausal state is assumed.

Exclusion criteria

1. Ocular

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Flare at day 1414 daysProportion of patients who will have a postoperative flare at day 14 equal or inferior to the preoperative value in the two groups
Flare to baselineWithin one monthTime needed to revert the postoperative flare (measured by laser flare meter in the anterior chamber of the eye) to the preoperative or lower level.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Best Corrected Visual Acuity (BCVA)14 daysProportion of subjects with BCVA equal to 10/10 at day 14 in the two groups
Macular thickness at optical coherence tomography (OCT)1 monthProportion of patients with central macular thickness greater than 300 microns at day 30 in the two groups
Ocular Comfort Grading Assessment (OCGA)14 daysSafety endpoint: proportion of patients with no ocular discomfort at day 14. Ocular discomfort will be assessed by the OCGA scale. The OCGA measures 7 ocular symptoms (eye pain, tearing, itching, foreign body sensation, photophobia, eye discharge, haziness); at visits, patients will assess the severity by grading each symptom as none (0), mild (1), moderate (2), or severe (3)

Countries

Italy

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 2, 2026