Available in Brazil
Patients from the Keratoconus Clinic at the Hospital das Clínicas of UNICAMP diagnosed
with keratoconus who are indicated for crosslinking will be evaluated regarding visual
acuity, refraction, biomicroscopy, automated keratometry (Auto Kerato Refractometer KR
8000® Alcon), Goldmann applanation tonometry, corneal specular microscopy (EM-3000®
Tomey) for endothelial cell count, corneal tomography (Pentacam® HR 70900 Oculus), and
corneal optical coherence tomography (SPECTRALIS® Heidelberg Engineering).
Once indicated for crosslinking, participants will be informed by the assistants of the
Keratoconus Clinic about the study. Those who, after being informed about all aspects of
the crosslinking procedure and the study, and sign the Informed Consent Form, will be
randomly divided into two groups of equal size and stratified by gender. Group A will
receive a prescription for insulin eye drops at a concentration of 50 IU/ml in a 0.5%
methylcellulose vehicle, 1 drop four times a day, until complete corneal epithelial
healing. Group B will receive a prescription for 0.5% methylcellulose eye drops
(placebo), 1 drop four times a day, until complete corneal epithelial healing.
The corneal crosslinking will be performed according to the standardized protocol of the
UNICAMP Ophthalmology Department by third-year residents, supervised by attending
physicians and faculty members. The procedure will be carried out in an outpatient
setting. The anesthetic technique is topical, achieved through the application of 0.4%
benoxinate hydrochloride eye drops (Oxinest). A blepharostat is then placed, and 30%
alcohol is applied to the corneal epithelium for 20 seconds, demarcated by an 8.0mm
optical zone marker to prevent alcohol leakage. The alcohol is removed using an absorbent
sponge (Merocel®), followed by thorough cleaning of the ocular surface with 0.9% sodium
chloride solution. Next, the corneal epithelium in the 8.0mm region is removed using a
corneal scraper, and the soaking procedure begins, consisting of the instillation of 1
drop of 0.1% riboflavin for 30 minutes at 3-minute intervals. After soaking, the cornea
is exposed to UV-A radiation at 9 mW/cm² for 10 minutes, with riboflavin instilled every
2 minutes during this period. Once the procedure is completed, 1 drop of moxifloxacin
hydrochloride 5.45mg/ml (Oftalmox®; Gbio) antibiotic eye drops is applied, and a
silicone-hydrogel soft contact lens, Air Optix Plus Hydraglyde (Alcon), is placed.
Insulin eye drops 50 IU/ml (Eye Pharma) in Group A and placebo eye drops of 0.5%
methylcellulose (Eye Pharma) in Group B will be prescribed every 6 hours to the eye that
underwent the crosslinking procedure until complete corneal epithelialization occurs.
Both the insulin and methylcellulose eye drops will come in identical bottles, making it
impossible for the participants and the research team conducting the subsequent
evaluations to distinguish between them. In addition to these medications, both groups
will undergo postoperative treatment with prednisolone acetate 10mg/ml (Ster®; Genom) 1
drop every 6 hours, moxifloxacin hydrochloride 5.45mg/ml (Oftalmox®; Gbio) 1 drop every 6
hours, sodium hyaluronate 0.15% (Hyabak®; Genom) 1 drop every 4 hours, and
silicone-hydrogel contact lenses (Air Optix Plus Hydraglyde; Alcon). These treatments are
part of the standard postoperative care prescribed by the UNICAMP Department of
Ophthalmology.
The primary outcome is the time to complete corneal epithelial healing. After epithelial
healing, the silicone-hydrogel contact lens will be removed, and the antibiotic eye drop
(Oftalmox®; Gbio) will be discontinued in both groups, as well as the insulin eye drop in
Group A and the methylcellulose eye drop in Group B. At this point, both groups will be
prescribed sodium hyaluronate 0.15% and prednisolone acetate 10mg/ml. Sodium hyaluronate,
an ocular lubricant, will be continued until the 30th postoperative day, and prednisolone
acetate will be tapered every 7 days following this schedule: every 8 hours; every 12
hours; every 24 hours; and discontinuation.
Third-year residents performing the procedures will not be masked, but they will not
conduct postoperative follow-up and evaluation, which will be the responsibility of the
research team. Participants will be masked, and the research team conducting the
follow-up will also be masked. In case of any suspected complications related to the
crosslinking procedure, an independent ophthalmologist from the cornea service will
evaluate the patient without knowing to which group the patient belongs and will
recommend the most appropriate treatment.
Postoperative visits will take place on the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd days after the crosslinking
procedure. A fourth evaluation will occur on the 6th day post-procedure, with follow-ups
every 48 hours until the corneal epithelium is fully healed. Typically, this period is
not expected to exceed one week in either group. Subsequent follow-ups will occur on the
30th and 60th days post-procedure. This follow-up schedule is routinely performed by the
UNICAMP Department of Ophthalmology.
At the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 6th postoperative days, the researcher responsible will
document corneal status through photographs obtained using the Keratograph - OCULUS®
device. If complete corneal healing has not occurred by the 6th day and further visits
are needed, this documentation will also be performed. During these visits, objective
factors such as ocular hyperemia and the extent of the epithelial defect will be
assessed. For quantitative assessment of the epithelial defect, the photographs obtained
using the Keratograph - OCULUS® will be analyzed using the ImageJ software
(https://imagej.nih.gov/ij/). These visits will be carried out during the patient's
routine care, lasting around 30 minutes. On the 30th postoperative day, biomicroscopy and
applanation tonometry will be performed, with a duration of approximately 15 minutes. On
the 60th postoperative day, visual acuity, refraction, biomicroscopy, corneal tomography,
corneal optical coherence tomography, and endothelial cell count will be performed, with
the visit lasting around 45 minutes. After this last visit, the patient will be referred
back to the Keratoconus Clinic for standard follow-up, with decisions to be made by the
UNICAMP Department of Ophthalmology.
1Research sites
36Patients around the world