Clinical efficacy and safety of a light mask for prevention of dark adaptation in treating and preventing progression of early diabetic macular oedema at 24 months (CLEOPATRA): a multicentre, phase 3, randomised controlled trial

Sobha Sivaprasad, Joana C Vasconcelos, A Toby Prevost, Helen Holmes, Philip Hykin, Sheena George, Caroline Murphy, Joanna Kelly, Geoffrey B Arden, Frank Ahfat, Ajay Bhatnagar, Nirodhini Narendran, Randhir Chavan, Abosede Cole, Roxanne Crosby-Nwaobi, Namritha Patrao, Deepthy Menon, Chris Hogg, Gary Rubin, Lauren Leitch-DevlinCatherine Egan, Nisha Shah, Tatiana Mansour, Tunde Peto, Haralabos Eleftheriadis, Joanathan Gibson, Arevik Ghulakhszian, Gilli Vafidis, Edward Hughes, Afsar Jafree, Geeta Menon, Priya Prakash, Maria Sandinha, Richard Smith, Peter Scanlon, Steve Chave, Steve Aldington, Angela Dale, Gillian Hood, Graham A Hitman, David Crabb, Alaistair Denniston, Douglas Lewin, Ian Grierson, Sarah Walker, Jackie Sturt, Debendra Sahu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background
We aimed to assess 24-month outcomes of wearing an organic light-emitting sleep mask as an intervention to treat and prevent progression of non-central diabetic macular oedema.

Methods
CLEOPATRA was a phase 3, single-blind, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial undertaken at 15 ophthalmic centres in the UK. Adults with non-centre-involving diabetic macular oedema were randomly assigned (1:1) to wearing either a light mask during sleep (Noctura 400 Sleep Mask, PolyPhotonix Medical, Sedgefield, UK) or a sham (non-light) mask, for 24 months. Randomisation was by minimisation generated by a central web-based computer system. Outcome assessors were masked technicians and optometrists. The primary outcome was the change in maximum retinal thickness on optical coherence tomography (OCT) at 24 months, analysed using a linear mixed-effects model incorporating 4-monthly measurements and baseline adjustment. Analysis was done using the intention-to-treat principle in all randomised patients with OCT data. Safety was assessed in all patients. This trial is registered with Controlled-Trials.com, number ISRCTN85596558.

Findings
Between April 10, 2014, and June 15, 2015, 308 patients were randomly assigned to wearing the light mask (n=155) or a sham mask (n=153). 277 patients (144 assigned the light mask and 133 the sham mask) contributed to the mixed-effects model over time, including 246 patients with OCT data at 24 months. The change in maximum retinal thickness at 24 months did not differ between treatment groups (mean change −9·2 μm [SE 2·5] for the light mask vs −12·9 μm [SE 2·9] for the sham mask; adjusted mean difference −0·65 μm, 95% CI −6·90 to 5·59; p=0·84). Median compliance with wearing the light mask at 24 months was 19·5% (IQR 1·9–51·6). No serious adverse events were related to either mask. The most frequent adverse events related to the assigned treatment were discomfort on the eyes (14 with the light mask vs seven with the sham mask), painful, sticky, or watery eyes (14 vs six), and sleep disturbance (seven vs one).

Interpretation
The light mask as used in this study did not confer long-term therapeutic benefit on non-centre-involving diabetic macular oedema and the study does not support its use for this indication.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)382-391
JournalLancet diabetes & endocrinology
Volume6
Issue number5
Early online date5 Mar 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2018

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