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Topical Insulin in Neurotrophic Keratopathy After Diabetic Vitrectomy

Efficacy and Safety of Topical Insulin in Acute-onset Neurotrophic Keratopathy After Diabetic Vitrectomy

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05940376
Enrollment
30
Registered
2023-07-11
Start date
2023-07-15
Completion date
2023-08-15
Last updated
2023-07-11

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

Conditions

Corneal Ulcer, Neurotrophic Corneal Ulcer, Diabetes Mellitus

Brief summary

Various treatment options have been proposed in managing NK such as preservative-free lubrication (PF-L), withdrawal of epitheliotoxic medication, prophylactic antibiotics, applying of bandage contact lenses, using hemoderivatives 8, topical insulin, recombinant nerve growth factor (rNGF) or epidermal growth factor (rEGF).11,12, amniotic membrane transplant (AMT), or corneal neurotization.2,4,9,10 Topical insulin has been reported to effectively promote the healing of persistent corneal epithelial defects. In our retrospective study, we explored the safety and efficacy of topical insulin, as a first-line treatment, in treatment-naïve acute NK after diabetic vitrectomy.

Detailed description

Corneal nerves play a vital role in maintaining the homeostasis of the ocular surface. Not only mediating sensory reflexes such as blinking and lacrimation, but also corneal nerves critically maintain the integrity of corneal epithelium and the nerves themselves via producing trophic factors. An insult anywhere from the trigeminal nerve nucleus to the terminal nerve endings of the nasociliary nerve can disrupt this homeostasis and lead to corneal hypoesthesia and neurotrophic keratopathy (NK). The pathogenesis of NK has been associated with infectious, inflammatory, toxic, and iatrogenic etiologies such as ocular herpetic infection, ocular or neurologic surgery, trauma, chemical burn, diabetes, and dry eye disease. 3,4 In diabetic keratopathy, several corneal changes have been reported including abnormal basement membrane structure, poor epithelial adherence, hypothesia and alterations in the corneal stroma, Descemet membrane, and corneal endothelium. Also, NK has been reported as a rare complication of endolaser panretinal photocoagulation (PRP) and transscleral cyclophotocoagulation.7, 8, 9, 10, 11 The suggested mechanism entails the occurrence of thermal injury to the long ciliary nerve branches as they enter the suprachoroidal space at the positions corresponding to 3 and 9 o'clock on the eye. In diabetic patients, NK may present as a persistent epithelial defect refractory to conventional measures, predisposing to microbial keratitis, and/or stromal melting/scarring with subsequent perforation/blindness.3,4 Thus, rapid corneal re-epithelialization is needed to restore the corneal surface integrity. Various treatment options have been proposed in managing NK such as preservative-free lubrication (PF-L), withdrawal of epitheliotoxic medication, prophylactic antibiotics, applying of bandage contact lenses, using hemoderivatives 8, topical insulin, recombinant nerve growth factor (rNGF) or epidermal growth factor (rEGF).11,12, amniotic membrane transplant (AMT), or corneal neurotization.2,4,9,10 Topical insulin has been reported to effectively promote the healing of persistent corneal epithelial defects. In our study, we explored the safety and efficacy of topical insulin, as a first-line treatment, in treatment-naïve acute NK after diabetic vitrectomy.

Interventions

Topical insulin drops were prepared by diluting 1 unit of fast-acting insulin per 1 mL of an artificial tear with a propylene glycol base. Drops were preserved at low temperature (2°C) and, was provided by the cornea specialist and was self-administered by patients at a dosage of 1 eye drop 4 times daily. Treatment continued until NK healed and then tapered accordingly. Patients would discontinue topical insulin if the condition did not improve or worsen within 4 weeks. Patients were followed up daily and slit-lamp photographs were captured with and without fluorescein corneal staining.

Sponsors

Benha University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
CASE_CONTROL
Time perspective
RETROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Adult diabetic patients (18 years of age) with neurotrophic keratopathy developing within 21 days after diabetic vitrectomy. NK was classified as stage 1 (epithelial changes only without epithelial defect), stage 2 (persistent epithelial defect) or stage 3 (corneal ulcer) according to published criteria. * decreased corneal sensitivity within the corneal lesion and in at least 1 corneal quadrant outside the lesion.

Exclusion criteria

* Those patients who needed intraoperative epithelial debridement during vitrectomy, having past history of ocular surgeries other than cataract surgery, or history of herpetic eye disease or limbal stem cell deficiency were excluded. * active ocular infection or inflammation unrelated to neurotrophic keratopathy, lagophthalmos, and other ocular disease or severe vision loss in the affected eye(s).

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
time to epithelial healing4 weekshealed ulcer is defined as \<0.5 mm of fluorescein staining in the greatest dimension of the lesion area.

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
any adverse effect of topical insulin or need for amniotic membrane transplantation8 weeks

Countries

Egypt

Contacts

Primary ContactTaher Kamel Mahmoud Hussein Eleiwa, MD PhD
tahereleiwa87@gmail.com01069901973

Outcome results

None listed

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