Corneal Biomechanical Analysis Using Brillouin Microscopy
NCT ID: NCT04598932
Last Updated: 2025-10-29
Study Results
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Basic Information
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ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
220 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2021-06-01
2026-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Keratoconus is up to 10 times more prevalent than the previously reported 1/2000 figure. Corneal cross-linking (CXL) is now FDA approved in the US for keratoconus treatment and is effective at stiffening the cornea and halting ectasia progression. Early identification of keratoconus is critical, but current tests in the clinic are morphological, not biomechanical, and therefore do not allow a definitive diagnosis at the earliest stages resulting in vision loss before CXL treatment is initiated. Thus, the need for accurate identification of subclinical ectasia has never been greater.
In the past years, newly developed technology, Brillouin microscopy, has emerged as the most promising tool to address this clinical need. This study will systemically address the critical gap in current knowledge by linking Brillouin mapping of corneal biomechanical alterations to abnormal morphological behavior and testing the findings in conditions where corneal biomechanics are abruptly altered, by: 1) weakening with refractive surgery procedures, and 2) strengthening through corneal cross-linking.
It is anticipated that a clinical tool assessing the mechanical state of the cornea will improve early diagnosis and management of keratoconus as well as refractive surgery planning. Ultimately, this will lead to predictive models where Brillouin measurements could be an accurate predictor of postoperative outcomes and thus aid in developing individualized surgical parameters.
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
CROSS_SECTIONAL
Study Groups
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1: Normal Controls
Patients with normal corneas without any prior surgery to serve as the control group
Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
2 Keratoconus
Patients with various stages of keratoconus
Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
3: LASIK
Patients with normal corneas who are undergoing laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK)
Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
Group 4: PRK
Patients with normal corneas who are undergoing photorefractive keratectomy (PRK)
Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
5: SMILE
Patients with normal corneas who are undergoing small incision lenticular extraction (SMILE)
Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
6: CXL
Patients with keratoconus who are undergoing corneal cross-linking (CXL)
Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
Interventions
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Brillouin microscopy
The Brillouin clinical instrument is comprised of three parts: a human interface, a laser-scanning confocal microscope, and an etalon-based spectrometer. The human interface is a modified ophthalmic slit-lamp instrument with chin support and headrest. The light source is a single longitudinal mode CW laser at 780 nm. A polarizing beam splitter and quarter-wave plate assembly sends the laser beam to the human interface. To focus light into the eye, a long-working distance microscope objective is used. Brillouin scattered light from the eye is collected with a single-mode optical fiber. For spectral analysis, a two-stage VIPA-etalon spectrometer configured with the cross-axis cascade principle and the spectrum is measured on a EM-CCD camera.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* patients aged 18-60 with normal corneas,
* patients aged 18-60 undergoing refractive surgery (LASIK, PRK, SMILE)
* patients aged 18-60 with keratoconus undergoing CXL
Exclusion Criteria
* history of previous ocular surgeries
* unable to cooperate for the Brillouin microscopic examination
* unable to provide informed consent
18 Years
60 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Maryland
OTHER
The Cleveland Clinic
OTHER
Responsible Party
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James Bradley Randleman
Staff Physician
Locations
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Cleveland Clinic Cole Eye Institute
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Countries
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References
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Zhang H, Roozbahani M, Piccinini AL, Golan O, Hafezi F, Scarcelli G, Randleman JB. Depth-Dependent Reduction of Biomechanical Efficacy of Contact Lens-Assisted Corneal Cross-linking Analyzed by Brillouin Microscopy. J Refract Surg. 2019 Nov 1;35(11):721-728. doi: 10.3928/1081597X-20191004-01.
Webb JN, Langille E, Hafezi F, Randleman JB, Scarcelli G. Biomechanical Impact of Localized Corneal Cross-linking Beyond the Irradiated Treatment Area. J Refract Surg. 2019 Apr 1;35(4):253-260. doi: 10.3928/1081597X-20190304-01.
Randleman JB, Su JP, Scarcelli G. Biomechanical Changes After LASIK Flap Creation Combined With Rapid Cross-Linking Measured With Brillouin Microscopy. J Refract Surg. 2017 Jun 1;33(6):408-414. doi: 10.3928/1081597X-20170421-01.
Scarcelli G, Pineda R, Yun SH. Brillouin optical microscopy for corneal biomechanics. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2012 Jan 20;53(1):185-90. doi: 10.1167/iovs.11-8281.
Scarcelli G, Kling S, Quijano E, Pineda R, Marcos S, Yun SH. Brillouin microscopy of collagen crosslinking: noncontact depth-dependent analysis of corneal elastic modulus. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2013 Feb 19;54(2):1418-25. doi: 10.1167/iovs.12-11387.
Scarcelli G, Besner S, Pineda R, Yun SH. Biomechanical characterization of keratoconus corneas ex vivo with Brillouin microscopy. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2014 Jun 17;55(7):4490-5. doi: 10.1167/iovs.14-14450.
Scarcelli G, Besner S, Pineda R, Kalout P, Yun SH. In vivo biomechanical mapping of normal and keratoconus corneas. JAMA Ophthalmol. 2015 Apr;133(4):480-2. doi: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2014.5641. No abstract available.
Other Identifiers
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20-355
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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