Corneal ulcer and adverse reaction rates in premarket contact lens studies

We analyzed clinical data on 22,739 contact lens wearers who were studied and whose lenses were approved under 48 manufacturer-sponsored studies for the Food and Drug Administration between 1980 and 1988. The incidence of corneal ulcers was low in the cosmetic (nontherapeutic) daily-wear soft and ri...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAmerican journal of ophthalmology Vol. 111; no. 4; p. 457
Main Authors MacRae, S, Herman, C, Stulting, R D, Lippman, R, Whipple, D, Cohen, E, Egan, D, Wilkinson, C P, Scott, C, Smith, R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 15.04.1991
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Summary:We analyzed clinical data on 22,739 contact lens wearers who were studied and whose lenses were approved under 48 manufacturer-sponsored studies for the Food and Drug Administration between 1980 and 1988. The incidence of corneal ulcers was low in the cosmetic (nontherapeutic) daily-wear soft and rigid gas-permeable lens wearers (1/1,923 and 1/1,471 patient-years, respectively). Corneal ulcers and severe adverse reactions occurred two to four times more frequently in extended-wear cosmetic soft and rigid gas-permeable lens wearers than in cosmetic daily-wear lens wearers. Aphakic extended-wear soft lens users were nine times more likely to develop a corneal ulcer when compared to the soft daily-wear cosmetic group. Corneal abrasions and keratitis accounted for 81 of 159 severe adverse reactions, whereas corneal ulcers accounted for 28 of 159 adverse reactions. The data indicate that overnight extended wear of contact lenses is associated with a greater risk of serious, sight-threatening complications than daily wear.
ISSN:0002-9394
DOI:10.1016/S0002-9394(14)72381-5