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Intracameral Levofloxacin (0.5%) vs Intracameral Cefuroxime

Intracameral Levofloxacin (0.5%) Versus Intracameral Cefuroxime (1mg/0.1ml) Effect on Corneal Endothelial Cell Count and Morphology in Uneventful Phacoemulsification

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Phase 1Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04212078
Enrollment
138
Registered
2019-12-26
Start date
2019-07-29
Completion date
2022-10-31
Last updated
2020-09-21

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

Conditions

Endophthalmitis Postoperative

Keywords

Intracameral Cefuroxime, Levofloxacin, Corneal Endothelial Cell count, Corneal Morphology

Brief summary

Endophthalmitis is a clinical diagnosis made when intraocular inflammation involving both posterior and anterior chamber; is attributable to bacterial or fungal infection. It is a serious intraocular inflammatory disorder which can be spread via endogenous or exogenous access into the eye by infecting organism. Exogenous spread usually happens post intraocular surgery or procedure (i.e. cataract, vitrectomy, glaucoma filtration surgery) while endogenous spread is associated with hematogenous spread. The occurrence of endophthalmitis accounts for serious post-operative complication which can lead to severe vision loss and even blindness. There are several studies conducted to ascertain the efficiency of intracameral antibiotic as post-operative endophthalmitis prophylaxis. However, there is limited study in human using intracameral levofloxacin to evaluate its effect.This study is designed to compare between intracameral levofloxacin and intracameral cefuroxime in terms of corneal endothelial cell count and its morphology and central corneal thickness in uncomplicated phacoemulsification surgery

Detailed description

This is a prospective, double - blinded randomized clinical trial conducted in University Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre (UKMMC). All patients from Ophthalmology Clinic in UKM Medical Centre from December 2018 till June 2021 will be involved in this study. Patients who fulfill the inclusion criteria will be included in this study. Preoperative assessment includes proper history taking and ocular examinations.Ocular examination includes baseline visual acuity, slit lamp examinations to ascertain the cataract grading, anterior chamber reactions preoperatively, intraocular pressure measurement via applanation tonometry and fundus examinations using 78D condensing lens. Cornea endothelial examinations will be done by using non-contact TOPCON Specular Microscopy model SP-1P. On the day of surgery, patients will be informed about the two different antibiotics available that will be used at the end of cataract surgery. A written informed consent will be obtained from the patient. Patients will be randomized before entering the operating theatre. Sealed envelopes total of 4 will be prepared by the researcher; 2 of which will be labelled as A and another 2 envelopes will be labelled as B. The researcher will randomly pick 1 envelope and allocate to patient's file. The staff nurse in charge will then open the envelope, label A or B will then be pasted on the patient's file (rear part) for documentation. Cataract surgery will be performed byusing Centurion®Vision System, Alcon, Texas, United Stated of America (USA) phacoemulsification machine. 0.3 ml of levofloxacin 0.5% ophthalmic solution (Cravit®, Santen) will be syringed out and at the conclusion of cataract surgery, the solution of 0.1ml which has 0.5 mg levofloxacin will be injected via intracameral into the anterior chamber through the side port wound using a tuberculin syringe in a 27 gauge cannula. On the other hand, at the beginning part of surgery, cefuroxime will be diluted by the researcher. In order to reduce dilution error and contamination, dilution will be done strictly according to a standardised protocol that was obtained from Malaysian Clinical Practice Guideline. The vial contains 750 mg of cefuroxime powder is diluted with 7.5 ml of Balanced Salt Solution (BSS). 1 ml of the solution will be withdrawn and added with 9 ml of BSS. Then, 0.1 ml of solution which is equivalent to 1 mg of cefuroxime will be aspirated and kept a side. Then the antibiotic of 0.1 ml will be given as intracameral to patient using a tuberculin syringe in a 27 gauge cannula at side port wound at the end of surgery. The side port wound will then be sealed by stromal hydration and checked for water tightness. This will be followed by instillation of topical guttae ciprofloxacin 0.3% (Ciloxan, Alcon) and guttae dexamethasone 0.1% (Maxidex, Alcon) and eye shield will be applied before leaving the operating theatre. Patient will be reviewed again after 2 hours post operatively at the slit lamp and eye drops guttae ciprofloxacin 0.3% and guttae dexamethasone 0.1% will be instilled every 2 hours (5 minutes apart from one eye drop to another) for the first one week post-surgery. Upon discharge, patient will be reviewed again in eye clinic after 1 week and during this visit, these eye drops will then be tapered to 4 hourly for two weeks then six hourly for two weeks until next review. After one month the eye drops will be discontinued. Patients will then be reviewed after one week, one month and three months post operation. During each visit, patient will be examined under slit lamp to look for anterior chamber reaction and to measure intraocular pressure. They will undergo specular microscopy examination to assess cornea endothelial cell count and morphology and central cornea thickness.

Interventions

0.1ml which has 0.5 mg levofloxacin will be injected via intracameral into the anterior chamber through the side port wound using a tuberculin syringe in a 27 gauge cannula.

DRUGCefuroxime

The vial contains 750 mg of cefuroxime powder is diluted with 7.5 ml of Balanced Salt Solution (BSS). 1 ml of the solution will be withdrawn and added with 9 ml of BSS. Then, 0.1 ml of solution which is equivalent to 1 mg of cefuroxime will be aspirated and kept a side. The dissolution of the antibiotic is confirmed by naked eye. Then the antibiotic of 0.1 ml will be given as intracameral to patient using a tuberculin syringe in a 27 gauge cannula at side port wound at the end of surgery.

Sponsors

Santen Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
National University of Malaysia
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
50 Years to 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* All patients with senile cataract and age 50 - 80 years

Exclusion criteria

* Patients with cataract other than senile cataract (e.g. traumatic cataract) * Patients with underlying cornea disease (e.g. cornea dystrophy) * Patients with corneal endothelial disease/endothelial cell count less than 1000/sqmm². * Patients with intraoperative complications such as posterior capsule rupture/ prolapsed iris/ zonulysis/ anterior vitreous loss. * Cataract grading nucleosclerosis (NS) 2+ and below.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Comparison of change in Endothelial cell count concentration in patients treated with intracameral levofloxacin ophthalmic solution and intracameral cefuroxime in an uneventful phacoemulsification.1-week post-operationChange in Concentration of Endothelial cell count (cells/mm2) from Baseline, measured at 1-week post-operation using a non-contact TOPCON Specular Microscopy model SP-1P.
Comparison of change in Endothelial cell morphology in patients treated with intracameral levofloxacin ophthalmic solution and intracameral cefuroxime in an uneventful phacoemulsification.1-week post-operationChange in Endothelial cell morphology from Baseline by assessing the Polymegathism (CV) which is the variation in individual cell areas, and Pleomorphism which is the increased in variability of cell shape, at 1-week post-operation using a non-contact TOPCON Specular Microscopy model SP-1P.
Comparison of change in endothelial cell morphology in patients treated with intracameral levofloxacin ophthalmic solution and intracameral cefuroxime in an uneventful phacoemulsification.1-month post-operationChange in Endothelial cell morphology from Baseline by assessing the Polymegathism (CV) which is the variation in individual cell areas, and Pleomorphism which is the increased in variability of cell shape, at 1-month post-operation using a non-contact TOPCON Specular Microscopy model SP-1P.
Comparison of change in Central cornea thickness in patients treated with intracameral levofloxacin ophthalmic solution and intracameral cefuroxime in an uneventful phacoemulsification.1-week post-operationChange in Central cornea thickness (µm) from Baseline, measured at 1-week post-operation using a non-contact TOPCON Specular Microscopy model SP-1P.
Comparison of Anterior chamber reaction in patients treated with intracameral levofloxacin ophthalmic solution with intracameral cefuroxime in an uneventful phacoemulsification.1-week post-operationAnterior chamber cell grading refers to presence of inflammatory reaction in the anterior chamber (the space in front of iris plane and cornea endothelium). It is graded by counting the number of cells that is present with slit beam of 1mm x 1mm with high intensity of light measured using the slit lamp at 1-week post-operation.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Side effectsPost-operative period until study completion, an average of 2 yearsTo report any untoward incidence of endophthalmitis during the study period.

Countries

Malaysia

Contacts

Primary ContactWan Haslina Wan Abdul Halim, M.D
afifiyad@yahoo.co.uk+6019-6679633

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026