Toronto Eye Care, Toronto, Canada.
School of Optometry, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2024 Sep 5;9(9):CD015751. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD015751.pub2.
Contact lens discomfort is a symptom-based clinical diagnosis that affects 13% to 75% of contact lens wearers. The Tear Film and Ocular Surface Society defines contact lens discomfort as "a condition characterized by episodic or persistent adverse ocular sensations related to lens wear either with or without visual disturbance, resulting from reduced compatibility between the lens and ocular environment, which can lead to decreased wearing time and discontinuation from lens wear." Signs of the condition include conjunctival hyperemia, corneal and conjunctival staining, altered blinking patterns, lid wiper epitheliopathy, and meibomian gland dysfunction. Eye care specialists often treat contact lens discomfort with lubricating drops, including saline, although there is no clear evidence showing this treatment is effective and safe.
To evaluate the efficacy and safety of lubricating drops for ocular discomfort associated with contact lens wear in adults.
We searched CENTRAL (which contains the Cochrane Eyes and Vision Trials Register), MEDLINE, Embase.com, two other databases, and two trials registries to May 2024, without date or language restrictions.
We included parallel-group randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that evaluated lubricating drops, including saline, versus no treatment, or that evaluated lubricating drops versus saline, in adult contact lens wearers. We included studies regardless of publication status, language, or year of publication.
We applied standard Cochrane methodology. The critical outcome was contact lens discomfort. Important outcomes were corneal fluorescein staining and conjunctival redness. Adverse outcomes were incident microbial keratitis, inflammatory corneal infiltrates, and participant discontinuation. We assessed risk of bias for outcomes reported in the summary of findings table using the Cochrane risk of bias tool RoB 2, and we rated the certainty of the evidence using GRADE.
We included seven RCTs conducted in the USA, Canada, Italy, and France. They randomized a total of 463 participants to lubricating drops, saline, or no treatment. Four trials evaluated lubricating drops and saline versus no treatment, but one of them provided no usable outcome data. Three trials evaluated lubricating drops versus saline. Study characteristics All trial participants were adults, and the mean age ranged from 25.7 years to 36.7 years. The proportion of women varied from 15% to 82%. The trials lasted between one and four weeks. Of the five trials that reported contact lens discomfort, we judged three at high risk of bias, and considered the other two had some risk of bias concerns. Lubricating drops (including saline) versus no treatment Lubricating drops compared with no treatment may reduce contact lens discomfort, measured on a 37-point scale (lower is better), but the evidence is very uncertain (mean difference [MD] -5.9 points, 95% confidence interval [CI] -3.74 to -8.05; 2 RCTs; 119 participants). One trial found no difference between lubricating drops and no treatment in "end-of-day" comfort. The trial that compared saline with no treatment provided no results for the control group. Two studies measured corneal fluorescein staining on a scale of 0 to 20 (lower is better). We found low-certainty evidence of little to no difference between lubricating drops and no treatment in changes in the extent (MD -0.15 points, 95% CI -0.86 to 0.56; 2 RCTs; 119 participants), depth (MD -0.01 points, 95% CI -0.44 to 0.42; 2 RCTs; 119 participants), or type (MD 0.04 points, 95% CI -0.38 to 0.46; 2 RCTs; 119 participants) of corneal fluorescein staining scores. Regarding conjunctival redness, measured on a scale of 0 to 4 (lower is better), there was low-certainty evidence of little to no difference between lubricating drops and no treatment in nasal region scores (MD 0.10, 95% CI -0.29 to 0.49; 1 RCT; 73 participants) and temporal region scores (MD 0.00, 95% CI -0.39 to 0.39; 1 RCT; 73 participants). No studies reported microbial keratitis or inflammatory corneal infiltrates, and no trials reported vision-threatening adverse events up to four weeks of treatment. All trials reported the proportion of participants who discontinued participation. In two trials, no participants left any treatment group. Our meta-analysis of another two studies suggests little difference in the number of people who dropped out of the lubricating treatment group versus the no treatment group (risk ratio [RR] 1.42, 95% CI 0.19 to 10.94; 138 participants; low-certainty evidence). Lubricating drops versus saline Lubricating drops may have little to no effect compared with saline on contact lens discomfort measured on a visual analog scale of 0 to 100 (lower is better), but the evidence is very uncertain (MD 9.5 points, 95% CI -4.65 to 23.65; 1 RCT; 39 participants). No studies reported corneal fluorescein staining or conjunctival redness. No studies reported microbial keratitis or inflammatory corneal infiltrates, and no trials reported vision-threatening adverse events up to four weeks of treatment. Our meta-analysis of three studies suggests little difference in the number of people who dropped out of the lubricating treatment group versus the saline group (RR 1.56, 95% CI 0.47 to 5.12; 269 participants; low-certainty evidence).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Very low-certainty evidence suggests that lubricating drops may improve contact lens discomfort compared with no treatment, but may have little or no effect on contact lens discomfort compared with saline. Low-certainty evidence also suggests that lubricating drops may have no unwanted effects that would lead to discontinuation over one to four weeks. Current evidence suggests that prescribing lubricating drops (including saline) to people with contact lens discomfort is a viable option. However, most studies did not assess patient-reported contact lens (dis)comfort using a validated instrument. Therefore, further well-designed trials are needed to generate high-certainty evidence on patient-reported outcomes as well as on longer-term safety outcomes.
接触镜不适是一种基于症状的临床诊断,影响 13% 至 75%的接触镜佩戴者。泪膜和眼表面协会将接触镜不适定义为“一种以与镜片佩戴相关的间歇性或持续性眼部不适为特征的病症,无论是否伴有视觉障碍,这是由于镜片与眼环境之间的兼容性降低所致,这可能导致佩戴时间减少和停止佩戴镜片。”这种情况的迹象包括结膜充血、角膜和结膜染色、眨眼模式改变、睑板腺功能障碍和泪膜不稳定。眼科专家通常使用润滑滴剂(包括生理盐水)来治疗接触镜不适,尽管没有明确的证据表明这种治疗是有效和安全的。
评估润滑滴眼剂治疗成人因佩戴接触镜而引起的眼部不适的疗效和安全性。
我们检索了 CENTRAL(包含 Cochrane 眼部和视觉试验注册库)、MEDLINE、Embase.com、另外两个数据库和两个试验注册库,检索截止日期为 2024 年 5 月,没有日期或语言限制。
我们纳入了评估润滑滴眼剂(包括生理盐水)与不治疗或评估润滑滴眼剂与生理盐水相比对成人接触镜佩戴者的眼部不适的平行组随机对照试验(RCT)。我们纳入了无论发表状态、语言或出版年份如何的研究。
我们应用了标准的 Cochrane 方法。关键结局是接触镜不适。重要结局是角膜荧光素染色和结膜充血。不良结局是微生物性角膜炎、炎症性角膜浸润和参与者停药。我们使用 Cochrane 偏倚风险工具 RoB 2 评估了在总结发现表中报告的结局的偏倚风险,并使用 GRADE 对证据的确定性进行了评级。
我们纳入了在美国、加拿大、意大利和法国进行的 7 项 RCT。它们共纳入了 463 名参与者,随机分配至润滑滴眼剂、生理盐水或不治疗组。四项试验评估了润滑滴眼剂和生理盐水与不治疗的效果,但其中一项提供了不可用的结局数据。三项试验评估了润滑滴眼剂与生理盐水的效果。研究特征:所有试验的参与者均为成年人,平均年龄为 25.7 岁至 36.7 岁。女性比例从 15%到 82%不等。试验持续时间为 1 至 4 周。在报告接触镜不适的五项试验中,我们认为其中三项有高度偏倚风险,另外两项则存在一些偏倚风险。润滑滴眼剂(包括生理盐水)与不治疗:与不治疗相比,润滑滴眼剂(包括生理盐水)可能会降低接触镜不适的程度(分数越低越好),但证据极不确定(平均差值 [MD] -5.9 分,95%置信区间 [CI] -3.74 至 -8.05;2 项 RCT;119 名参与者)。一项试验发现,润滑滴眼剂与不治疗在“结束时”的舒适度方面没有差异。比较生理盐水与不治疗的试验未提供对照组的结果。两项研究在 0 至 20 分的范围内测量角膜荧光素染色程度(分数越低越好)。我们发现,与不治疗相比,润滑滴眼剂在角膜荧光素染色程度(MD -0.15 分,95% CI -0.86 至 0.56;2 项 RCT;119 名参与者)、深度(MD -0.01 分,95% CI -0.44 至 0.42;2 项 RCT;119 名参与者)或类型(MD 0.04 分,95% CI -0.38 至 0.46;2 项 RCT;119 名参与者)方面的变化方面,证据为低确定性,差异无统计学意义。关于结膜充血,在 0 至 4 分的范围内(分数越低越好),我们发现,与不治疗相比,润滑滴眼剂在鼻侧区域评分(MD 0.10,95% CI -0.29 至 0.49;1 项 RCT;73 名参与者)和颞侧区域评分(MD 0.00,95% CI -0.39 至 0.39;1 项 RCT;73 名参与者)方面,差异无统计学意义。没有研究报告微生物性角膜炎或炎症性角膜浸润,也没有研究报告在治疗 4 周内发生危及视力的不良事件。所有试验均报告了参与者停药的比例。在两项试验中,没有参与者退出任何治疗组。我们对另外两项研究的荟萃分析表明,与不治疗组相比,润滑滴眼剂治疗组的退出人数差异无统计学意义(风险比 [RR] 1.42,95% CI 0.19 至 10.94;138 名参与者;低确定性证据)。润滑滴眼剂与生理盐水:与生理盐水相比,润滑滴眼剂在视觉模拟评分 0 至 100 分(分数越低越好)的接触镜不适方面可能几乎没有效果,但证据极不确定(MD 9.5 分,95% CI -4.65 至 23.65;1 项 RCT;39 名参与者)。没有研究报告角膜荧光素染色或结膜充血。没有研究报告微生物性角膜炎或炎症性角膜浸润,也没有研究报告在治疗 4 周内发生危及视力的不良事件。我们对三项研究的荟萃分析表明,与生理盐水组相比,润滑滴眼剂治疗组的停药人数差异无统计学意义(RR 1.56,95% CI 0.47 至 5.12;269 名参与者;低确定性证据)。
非常低确定性证据表明,与不治疗相比,润滑滴眼剂可能会改善接触镜不适,但与生理盐水相比,可能几乎没有改善接触镜不适。低确定性证据还表明,在 1 至 4 周的治疗期间,润滑滴眼剂可能没有导致停药的不良影响。目前的证据表明,对于因佩戴接触镜而感到不适的患者,开润滑滴眼剂(包括生理盐水)是一种可行的选择。然而,大多数研究没有使用经过验证的仪器来评估患者报告的接触镜(不适)。因此,需要进一步开展设计良好的试验,以产生基于患者报告结局的高质量证据,以及关于长期安全性结局的高质量证据。