| Literature DB >> 31943385 |
Reiko Arita1,2, Shima Fukuoka2,3.
Abstract
This review examines currently available non-pharmaceutical treatment modalities for meibomian gland dysfunction. A detailed search of the PubMed and MEDLINE databases was performed to identify original articles in English that have evaluated such nonpharmaceutical therapies in patients with this condition. Conventional therapies such as application of a warming compress, the practice of lid hygiene, and manual expression of meibomian glands as well as more technologically advanced approaches such as intraductal probing, thermal pulsation, and intense pulsed light therapy are included in the review. These non-pharmaceutical treatment options may each have a role to play in the management of meibomian gland dysfunction, but more studies are necessary to compare treatments directly under identical experimental conditions in order to determine their relative efficacy. Additional large-scale, randomised, controlled trials are also required to provide more information such as the specific indications best suited to each treatment modality, the efficacy of such approaches in combination with pharmaceutical-based therapy, and the mechanisms of action of some of the more technologically advanced systems.Entities:
Keywords: intense pulsed light; intraductal probing; meibomian gland; meibomian gland dysfunction; thermal pulsation
Year: 2020 PMID: 31943385 PMCID: PMC7687252 DOI: 10.1111/cxo.13035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Optom ISSN: 0816-4622 Impact factor: 2.742
Studies which have shown the safety and efficacy of eyelid warming
| Study, country | Study design | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) for warming group | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) for control group | Main outcomes | Device | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goto et al., | Prospective, non‐comparative | 37 eyes of 37 MGD patients (51 ± 21.2 years) | None | Improved ocular symptoms, TBUT, corneal and conjunctival staining, and MG obstruction score | Eye Hot | III |
| Mori et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, controlled | 34 eyes of 17 MGD patients (53.8 ± 14.7 years) | Untreated 16 eyes of 8 MGD patients (53.4 ± 17.5 years) | Improved tear film stability and uniformity of the lipid layer of the tear film | Hot Eye Mask | II |
| Purslow, | Prospective, non‐comparative | 25 eyes of 25 healthy subjects (29.2 ± 5.7 years) | None | Provided sufficient warming to melt meibum and reduced hyperaemia | Blephasteam | III |
| Benitez Del Castillo et al., | Prospective, non‐comparative | 73 eyes of 73 MGD patients (55.3 ± 17.3 years) | None | Most patients found the device comfortable to use and were able to continue with activities such as watching television, reading, and using a computer, findings that might be expected to contribute to compliance | Blephasteam | III |
| Bilkhu et al., | Prospective, randomised, single‐masked, controlled | 25 eyes of 25 MGD patients (28.7 ± 7.8 years) | Contralateral eyes | Device was safe and effective, with its effects persisting for up to 6 months | MGDRx EyeBag | I |
| Sim et al., | Prospective, assessor‐blinded, randomised, controlled | 50 MGD patients (53.5 ± 11.1 years), with 25 each for Blephasteam and EyeGiene | 25 MGD patients (56.3 ± 11.0 years) for a warm towel | Blephasteam was more effective than a warm towel and EyeGiene; each therapy was safe with regard to visual acuity for 3 months of treatment | Blephasteam, EyeGiene, warm towel | I |
| Villani et al., | Prospective, non‐comparative | 50 MGD patients (64 ± 12 years) | None | Improved ocular symptoms and tear film stability, and reduced acinar diameter and area as detected by | Blephasteam | III |
| Wang et al., | Prospective, examiner‐masked, randomised, paired‐eye | 41 eyes of 41 MGD patients (26.7 ± 12.9 years) | Contralateral eyes | Both devices clinically and significantly improved NIBUT and LLG, whereas the MGDRx EyeBag was more effective at raising ocular temperature | EyeGiene, MGDRx EyeBag | I |
| Arita et al., | Prospective, examiner‐masked, randomised | 10 healthy subjects (32.3 ± 11.7 years) and 10 MGD patients (75.6 ± 6.7 years) | The order of devices was randomised | Dry warming was more effective for improving tear film stability and meibum condition than wet warming both in healthy subjects and MGD patients | Azuki‐no‐Chikara, Eye Hot R, Hot Eye Mask, Memoto Esthe, hot towel | I |
| Murakami et al., | Prospective, randomised, paired‐eye | 5 eyes of 5 healthy subjects (42.2 ± 20.3 years) | Contralateral eyes | The bundle method, although the most labour‐intensive, was the most effective at increasing eyelid temperature above the therapeutic level | EyeGiene, Bruder Moist Heat Eye Compress, MGDRx EyeBag, TheraPearl mask, rice bag, bundled hot towels, Tranquileyes (Eyeeco), Blephasteam | I |
| Bitton et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled | 12 healthy subjects (23.2 ± 3.8 years) | The order of devices was randomised | All devices with the exception of a hot towel showed stable heat retention over 12 minutes | MGDRx EyeBag, EyeDoctor, Bruder Moist Heat Eye Compress, Tranquileyes XR, TheraPearl, hot towel | I |
| Arita et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled, crossover | 20 eyes of 20 healthy subjects (34.9 ± 6.8 years) and 36 eyes of 36 patients with dry eye (30.4 ± 5.7 years) | Crossover | Single or repeated application of a menthol‐containing heated mask significantly improved tear meniscus volume, TBUT, and meibum condition in both healthy subjects and dry eye patients | Hot Eye Mask containing menthol and similar mask without menthol | I |
| Turnbull et al., | Prospective, single‐visit, randomised | 81 eyes of 81 MGD patients (46 ± 18 years), with 25 eyes for Blephasteam and 28 eyes for MGDRx EyeBag | 28 eyes for liposomal spray | All 3 treatments improved tear film quality in a manner independent of MGD severity | Blephasteam, MGDRx EyeBag, liposomal spray | I |
LLG: lipid layer grade, MG: meibomian gland, MGD: meibomian gland dysfunction, NIBUT: non‐invasive break‐up time, TBUT: tear film break‐up time.
Figure 1Therapeutic expression of thickened and toothpaste‐like meibum in a patient with meibomian gland dysfunction with the use of an Arita meibomian gland compressor
Studies which have shown the safety and efficacy of intraductal probing
| Study, country | Study design | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) for probing group | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) for control group | Main outcomes | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maskin, | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 25 obstructive MGD patients (70.2, 37–93 years) | None | Probing was safe and ameliorated ocular symptoms including lid tenderness | III |
| Nakayama et al., | Prospective case study | 6 lid margins of 3 refractory MGD patients (age not listed) | None | Probing improved meibum lipid levels as measured with a meibometer as well as reduced meibum viscosity | III |
| Ma and Lu, | Prospective, randomised, controlled | 25 MGD patients (57.7 ± 11.2 years) | 24 MGD patients (55.5 ± 10.6 years) treated with 0.1% fluorometholone | Probing improved subjective symptoms, meibum grade, TBUT, lid margin abnormalities, and fluorescein staining compared with the control | I |
| Sik Sarman et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 58 eyes of 30 refractory MGD patients (47 ± 4.5 years) | None | Probing improved ocular symptoms (OSDI) and TBUT for up to 3 months as well as reduced hyperaemia and lid margin vascularity | III |
| Syed and Sutula, | Retrospective | 70 eyelids of 40 refractory MGD patients (57.4, 27–92 years) | None | Dynamic intraductal probing ameliorated ocular symptoms and was safe for treatment of refractory obstructive MGD | III |
| Maskin and Testa, | Retrospective | 34 eyelids of 19 patients (62.3 ± 13.3 years) | None | Probing increased total gland area and mean individual gland area observed by non‐contact meibography | III |
| Incekalan et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled | 40 eyes of 20 MGD patients (51.8 ± 12.9 years) | 40 eyes of 20 MGD patients (52.2 ± 11.5 years) receiving conventional treatment | Probing induced rapid symptom relief and clinical improvement | I |
MGD: meibomian gland dysfunction, OSDI: Ocular Surface Disease Index, TBUT: tear film break‐up time.
Figure 2Thermal pulsation system. A LipiFlow thermal pulsation system (Johnson & Johnson Vision) is applied bilaterally to a 65‐year‐old woman with mild meibomian gland dysfunction.
Studies which have shown the safety and efficacy of thermal pulsation (VTP system)
| Study, country | Study design | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) in the VTP group | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) in the control group | Main outcomes | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Korb and Blackie, | Prospective case study | Both eyes of 1 MGD patient (39 years) | None | VTP increased TBUT and the number of functional MGs as well as reduced ocular symptoms for up to 3 months | III |
| Lane et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled, crossover, multicentre | 138 eyes of 69 MGD patients (age not listed) | 140 eyes of 70 MGD patients (age not listed) treated with a warm compress, with crossover to VTP | VTP was more effective than a warm compress applied daily for 2 weeks | I |
| Greiner, | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled, multicentre | 42 eyes of 21 MGD patients (62.2 ± 12.1 years) | None | VTP improved MG secretion, TBUT, and ocular symptoms for up to 9 months | III |
| Korb and Blackie, | Prospective case study (the same patient as in Korb and Blackie [2010]) | Both eyes of 1 MGD patient (39 years) | None | VTP improved MG secretion and reduced symptoms for up to 7 months in a patient with severe MG atrophy | III |
| Greiner, | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 36 eyes of 18 MGD patients (63.2 ± 12.1 years) | None | VTP increased the number of functional MGs and reduced symptoms for up to 1 year | III |
| Finis et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled, crossover | 17 eyes of 17 MGD patients (45 ± 23 years) | 14 eyes of 14 MGD patients (50 ± 19 years) treated with lid warming and massage, with crossover to VTP | VTP improved the number of functional MGs and symptoms and was as effective as lid hygiene practised twice daily for 3 months | I |
| Finis et al., | Prospective, non‐controlled (including patients who participated in the trial by Finis et al. [2014] above) | 52 eyes of 26 MGD patients (50 ± 22 years); VTP only (n = 17), VTP after lid hygiene for 3 months (n = 9) | None | VTP improved MG function and symptoms at 6 months, but had no effect on MG atrophy; patients with severe MG atrophy responded poorly | III |
| Satjawatcharaphong et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 64 eyes of 32 MGD patients (54.4 ± 15.0 years), including those with hypersecretory MGD | None | Severity of baseline symptoms and male gender were associated with symptomatic improvement after VTP | III |
| Greiner, | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 40 eyes of 20 MGD patients (61.4 ± 11.2 years); subcohort of the original study by Lane et al. (2012) | None | VTP improved MG secretion, the number of functional MGs, and symptoms for up to 3 years | III |
| Yeo et al., | Prospective, randomised controlled | 24 eyes of 24 MGD patients (70.0 ± 16.0 years) | 22 eyes of 22 MGD patients in each of three groups treated with a hot towel, EyeGiene, or Blephasteam twice daily (67.0 ± 21.7, 57.7 ± 22.7, and 69.7 ± 22.6 years, respectively) | VTP reduced conjunctival tear evaporation rate at 3 months and was more effective than a warm towel | I |
| Blackie et al., | Prospective, crossover, multicentre | 188 eyes of 99 MGD patients (56.2 ± 15.3 years) | 196 eyes of 98 MGD patients treated with a warm compress and lid hygiene, with crossover to VTP | VTP improved MG secretion and reduced symptoms over 1 year; early VTP for MGD was associated with improved treatment outcomes | I |
| Zhao et al., | Prospective, controlled, non‐randomised | 25 eyes of 25 MGD patients (55.6 ± 12.7 years) | 25 eyes of 25 MGD patients (56.4 ± 11.4 years) treated with a warm compress | VTP was as effective as twice daily application of a warm compress for 3 months; treatment efficacy was not affected by pre‐treatment MG loss | II |
| Zhao et al., | Prospective, contralateral eye | 29 eyes of 29 MGD patients (56.90 ± 7.07 years) | Contralateral eye (the eye the patient perceived as less affected) | Monocular VTP improved the number of functional MGs and symptoms compared with the control eye for up to 3 months | II |
| Kenrick and Alloo, | Prospective case study | Right eye of 1 patient (28 years) | Bruder Moist Heat Eye Compress, Blephasteam, and MiBoFlo Thermaflo before VTP | VTP increased the temperature of the inner surface of the eyelid to the 40°C therapeutic threshold for melting of obstructive meibum | III |
| Epitropoulos et al., | Retrospective, controlled | 43 eyes of 23 MGD patients with SS (62 ± 13.8 years) | 59 eyes of 36 MGD patients without SS | The improvement in MG secretion at 2 months after VTP was smaller in MGD patients with SS than in those without SS | II |
| Hagen et al., | Prospective, randomised, parallel‐group | 26 eyes of 13 MGD patients (51.7 ± 15.6 years) | 24 eyes of 12 MGD patients (50.4 ± 14.4 years) treated with oral doxycycline | VTP improved the signs of MGD and was as effective as oral doxycycline administration for 3 months | I |
MG: meibomian gland, MGD: meibomian gland dysfunction, SS: Sjögren's syndrome, TBUT: tear film break‐up time, VTP: vectored thermal pulsation.
Figure 3Intense pulsed light therapy is administered with an M22 system (Lumenis) to a 38‐year‐old woman with moderate meibomian gland dysfunction
Studies which have shown the safety and efficacy of intense pulsed light (IPL)
| Study, country | Study design | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) in the IPL group | Number of eyes and subjects (mean ± SD age) in the control group | Main outcomes | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toyos et al., | Retrospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 182 eyes of 91 dry eye patients (21–84 years) | None | IPL plus MGX was safe and effective for MGD treatment, improving ocular symptoms and TBUT | III |
| Craig et al., | Prospective, randomised, double‐masked, placebo‐controlled, paired‐eye | 28 eyes of 28 MGD patients (45 ± 15 years) | Contralateral eye | IPL was effective for MGD treatment, improving tear film quality and reducing symptoms of dry eye | I |
| Gupta et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled, multicentre | 100 MGD or dry eye patients (63, 32–92 years) | None | IPL plus MGX improved lid margin vascularity, MG secretion, TBUT, and ocular symptoms (OSDI) | III |
| Vegunta et al., | Retrospective | 81 dry eye patients (61, 20–84 years) | None | IPL plus MGX improved MG secretion and ocular symptoms (SPEED score) | III |
| Jiang et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 40 eyes of 40 MGD patients (63.2 ± 12.1 years) | None | IPL improved ocular symptoms, TBUT, TMH, corneal staining, lid margin abnormalities, and meibum secretion | III |
| Dell et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled, multicentre | 80 eyes of 40 MGD patients (57.5 ± 15.1 years) | None | IPL plus MGX improved ocular symptoms (SPEED score), TBUT, corneal staining, and MG secretion | III |
| Liu et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled, double‐masked | 44 MGD patients (46.3 ± 16.9, 23–86 years) | Contralateral eye | IPL plus MGX improved ocular symptoms (SPEED score) and TBUT as well as reduced the levels of inflammatory markers in tear fluid | I |
| Albietz and Schmid, | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled | 26 moderate‐to‐severe MGD patients (21–82 years) | None | IPL plus MGX improved meibum expressibility and quality, TBUT, corneal staining, as well as lid margin, bulbar, and limbal redness | III |
|
Rong et al., | Prospective, randomised, double‐masked, controlled | 44 MGD patients (46.3 ± 16.9 years) | Contralateral eye | IPL plus MGX improved ocular symptoms (SPEED score), TBUT, and meibum secretion relative to baseline; changes in MGYLS and TBUT were greater in the study eyes than in the control eyes, but changes in SPEED and corneal staining scores were similar | I |
|
Rong et al., | Prospective, randomised, double‐masked, controlled | 28 MGD patients (42.1 ± 17.6 years) | Contralateral eye | IPL plus MGX increased MG secretion and TBUT at 6 months after treatment | I |
| Seo et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised non‐controlled | 17 patients with rosacea and moderate or severe MGD (64, 57–68 years) | None | IPL plus MGX improved lid margin vascularity, meibum expressibility and quality in the lower eyelid, and ocular symptoms (OSDI) for up to 12 months after treatment | III |
| Arita et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, non‐controlled, multicentre | 62 eyes of 31 refractory MGD patients (47.6 ± 16.8 years) | None | IPL plus MGX improved ocular symptoms (SPEED score), NIBUT, lipid layer condition, meibum grade, lid margin abnormality scores, TBUT, and corneal staining | III |
| Arita et al., | Prospective, randomised, controlled | 22 refractory MGD patients (61.0 ± 18.0, 23–81 years) | 20 refractory MGD patients (61.9 ± 12.2, 39–78 years) undergoing MGX alone | IPL plus MGX improved ocular symptoms (SPEED score), TFLLT, NIBUT, TBUT, lipid layer condition, lid margin abnormalities, corneal staining, and meibum grade compared with the control | I |
| Ahmed et al., | Prospective, non‐randomised, controlled | 24 eyes of 12 MGD patients (50 ± 10 years) | 24 eyes of 12 healthy subjects (50 ± 10 years) | IPL increased the molecular weights of lysozyme, lactoferrin, and albumin as well as the concentrations of total lipids, triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipids in tear fluid | II |
MG: meibomian gland, MGD: meibomian gland dysfunction, MGX: meibomian gland expression, MGYLS: number of meibomian glands yielding liquid secretion, NIBUT: non‐invasive break‐up time, OSDI: Ocular Surface Disease Index, SPEED: Standard Patient Evaluation of Eye Dryness, TBUT: tear film break‐up time, TFLLT: tear film lipid layer thickness, TMH: tear meniscus height.