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Comparing Effect of Topical Tacrolimus 0.03% Versus Cyclosporine 0.05% in Dry Eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome

Evaluation of the Effect of Topical Application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) Eye Drops Versus Cyclosporine 0.05% Eye Drops in Treatment of Dry Eye in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03865888
Enrollment
60
Registered
2019-03-07
Start date
2018-10-30
Completion date
2019-04-30
Last updated
2019-05-22

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

Conditions

Dry Eye, Sjogren Syndrome

Keywords

Sjogren Syndrome, Dry eye, Cyclosporine, Tacrolimus

Brief summary

Evaluation of the effect of topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops in treatment of dry eye in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome.

Detailed description

Sjogren syndrome is a chronic autoimmune disorder characterized by immune cell infiltration of exocrine glands (exocrinopathy or epitheliitis) and systemic complications due to autoantibody production, immune complex deposition and lymphocytic infiltration of many organs .The loss of aqueous tear flow in Sjogren syndrome is a result of inflammatory cell infiltration of the lacrimal glands.The principal ocular manifestation of which is decreased tear production leading to chronic irritation and damage to the corneal and conjunctival epithelium. Dry eye associated with Sjogren syndrome (SS dry eye) is often more severe than non-Sjogren dry eye (non-SS dry eye). Rose bengal staining, fluorescein staining, impression cytology, and brush cytology show greater changes in SS dry eye owing to a lack of both basic tearing and reflex tearing resulting from lacrimal gland destruction, which is the hallmark of deteriorating clinical conditions. The initial tear film ocular surface society dry eye workshop report noted the importance of ocular surface inflammation not only in the development of, but as a downstream effect and propagator of dry eye disease , and reviewed a range of therapies that function, at least in part, by anti-inflammatory mechanisms of action. Thus understanding the link between inflammation and dry eye validates the utilization of anti-inflammatory therapy in everyday practice. Cyclosporine is understood to be an immunomodulatory drug with anti-inflammatory properties, as well as having other actions relevant to managing dry eye disease . Topical cyclosporine was approved by the FDA for the treatment of moderate-to-severe dry eye disease in 2003, based on an improvement in tear production. Tacrolimus, a macrolide produced by Streptomyces tsukubaensis,was discovered in 1984 in Japan while searching for new immunosuppressive and cancer chemotherapeutic agents. The use of tacrolimus is of special interest in ophthalmology because it is indicated to be effective in the treatment of immune-mediated diseases Thus, the investigators performed this study to evaluate the effect of two different immunomodulatory eye drops on the ocular surface which are topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops in treatment of dry eye in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome.

Interventions

Cyclosporins eye drops to be administered in dry eyes

DRUGTacrolimus

Tacrolimus eye drops to be administered in dry eyes

Sponsors

Pavly Moawd
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Intervention model description

Evaluation of the effect of topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops in treatment of dry eye in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
20 Years to 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients diagnosed as Secondary Sjogren syndrome according to the 2002 American European consensus group (AECG) criteria, which require the presence of well defined major connective tissue disease (such as rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus. * All patients show chronic symptoms of burning, foreign body sensation, itching in both eyes, abnormal Schirmer test \<5 mm wetting of the paper after 5 minutes, and abnormal tear breakup time (TBUT) \< 10 seconds. * Wash out period of 30 days before start of the immunomodulatory eye drops included in the investigator's study

Exclusion criteria

1. Any inflammation or active structural changes in the iris or anterior chamber. 2. Patients receiving or who had received systemic cyclosporine or tacrolimus. 3. Patients receiving any systemic drug that can cause dry eye as some antidepressants , antihistaminic drugs , hormonal therapy…etc 4. Glaucoma. 5. Previous ocular surgery. 6. Use of any topical medication other than artificial tears. 7. Contact lens wearers. 8. Presence of any corneal infection. 9. Any corneal diseases (ulcer, opacity, scar, bullous keratopathy, symblepharon or tumors). 10. Deforming structural lid or conjunctival abnormality. 11. Pregnancy. 12. Prior diagnosis of any of the following conditions would exclude participation in AECG study : Past head and neck radiation treatment Hepatitis C infection Acquired immunodeficiency disease (AIDS) Pre-existing lymphoma Sarcoidosis Graft versus host disease

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Comparison between the effect of topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops on tear film volume in dry eyes in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.3 months follow upTear film volume will be evaluated using Schirmer I test in millimetres in seconds in dry eyes before and after prescribing either cyclosporine or tacrolimus eye drops in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.
Evaluating the effect of topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops on ocular surface damage in dry eyes in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.3 months follow upOcular surface damage will be assessed in term of calculating ocular surface staining score in dry eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients before start and at end of treatment in cyclosporine and tacrolimus treated eyes.
Studying the effect of cyclosporine and tacrolimus eye drops on tear film stability in dry eyes in Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.3 months follow upTear film stability will be described in form of tear film break up time in seconds in treated dry eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients before and after adminstration of cyclosporine and tacrolimus eye drops.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Evaluating the effect of topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops on meibomian glands secretion in dry eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.3 months follow upComparing between effect of topical cyclosporine 0.05% and tacrolimus 0.03 % on meibomian glands secretions quality score in dry eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.
Studying the effect of topical application of Tacrolimus 0.03% (FK506) eye drops versus Cyclosporine 0.05% eye drops on expressibility of meibomian glands in dry eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.3 months follow upEvaluating the effect of topical cyclosporine 0.05% and tacrolimus 0.03 % on meibomian glands expressibility score in dry eyes of Secondary Sjogren Syndrome patients.

Countries

Egypt

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 16, 2026