| Literature DB >> 28782089 |
Tyler G Rowsey1,2, Dimitrios Karamichos3.
Abstract
Corneal diseases are an extensive cause of blindness worldwide and continue to persist as a challenging public health concern. Recently, various lipid-based therapies have been advocated for the modulation of corneal diseases; however, the number of studies is still very limited. Here we focus on developments and challenges on lipid-based therapies for dry eye disease, diabetic neuropathy, and Fuchs' endothelial corneal dystrophy. All three diseases are highly prevalent conditions and involve corneal stress and inflammation. Lipid-based therapeutics discussed includes cyclooxygenase inhibitors, essential fatty acids, and resolvin analogs. Lipids also show increasing promise as biomarkers of disease and are explored in this review.Entities:
Keywords: Corneal diseases; Corneal lipidomics; Lipid-based therapy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28782089 PMCID: PMC5552625 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-017-0158-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Fig. 1Structure of the cornea. Some images were provided by servier medical images
Lipid therapeutics/biomarkers available for corneal diseases
| Disease | Lipid therapeutics/biomarkers |
|---|---|
| Dry eye disease [ | Eicosapentaenoic acid, docosahexaenoic acid, and alpha linolenic acid, and resolvins have shown promise in improving symptoms of DED, matrix metalloproteinase-9 as an ideal biomarker due to its involvement in ocular surface inflammation |
| Diabetic neuropathy | Menhaden oil, daily injections of resolvin-D1, salsalate, enalapril, neuroprotectin D1, docosahexaenoic acid, as well as combination of enalapril, α-lipoic acid and menhaden oil have all shown to improve diabetic neuropathy |
| Fuchs’ endothelial corneal dystrophy | Mefenamic acid and nimesulide have shown to improve oxidative stress, ROCK inhibitor show potential for regenerative medicine, Diacylglycerophosphocholines, 1-ether, 2-acylglycerophosphocholines, eight sphingomyelins, and up to two long-chain highly unsaturated cholesteryl esters increased in the AH of FECD eyes, indicating potential oxidative stress markers |
Comparison of recent studies on fatty-acid supplementation for dry eye treatment
| Study | Sample size | Dose | Study variables | Duration of study | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gatell-Tortajada [ | 1419 patients (74.3% women, mean age 58.9 years) | 3 capsules/day of nutraceutical formulation (Brudysec® 1.5 g) | Dry eye symptoms, conjunctival hyperemia, tear breakup time (TBUT), Schrimer I test, Oxford grading scheme | 12-week prospective study | Symptoms improved significantly, artificial tear use decreased Schirmer test score, TBUT increased significantly, increase in patients grading 0–I in Oxford scale and decrease of those grading IV–V |
| Epitropoulos et al. [ | 105 subjects (ω-3 [n = 54]) (control [n = 51]) | Randomized to receive 4 softgels containing 1680 mg of EPA/560 mg of DHA or control of 3136 mg of linoleic acid | Measure tear osmolarity, (MMP-9), (TBUT), (OSDI), fluorescein corneal staining, schirmer score, meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) stage and ω-3 index | 12 week prospective study measured at baseline, week 6, and week 12 | Statistically significant reduction in tear osmolarity in the ω-3 group vs. control, increase in ω-3 index levels and TBUT ω-3 group significant reduction in MMP-9 positivity versus control group, OSDI scores decreased significantly in ω versus control group |
| Malhotra et al. [ | 60 patients with moderate MGD were allocated alternately to treatment and control groups | Both received warm compresses, lid massage, and artificial tear substitutes. Treatment group also received oral supplements of 1.2 g ω-3 FAs per day | To assess improving contrast sensitivity (CS) of patients with moderate meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) | 12 week prospective study. All parameters were recorded at baseline and at 12 weeks | Ocular surface disease index, tear break-up time, ocular surface staining, and meibum quality and expressibility improved significantly more so treatment group |
| Deinema et al. [ | 54 participants were randomized into 3 groups and received 1 of 3 interventions | Placebo (olive oil 1500 mg/day), krill oil (945 mg/day [EPA], + 510 mg/day [DHA], or fish oil (1000 mg/day EPA + 500 mg/day DHA) for 90 days, with monthly study visits | To assess the efficacy of 2 forms of oral long-chain ω-3 essential fatty acid supplements, phospholipid (krill oil) and triacylglyceride (fish oil), for treating DED | 3 month prospective study, parameters were measured at baseline and at 90 days | Tear osmolarity reduced in krill oil and fish oil supplements, OSDI score was significantly reduced in krill oil group only, Relative improvements in tear breakup time and ocular bulbar redness, compared with placebo, for both forms of ω-3 EFAs |