The Key to Effective MGD Management

The Key to Effective MGD Management

This supplement summarizes two live symposia for eye care practitioners focused on diagnosing and treating meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD). Key opinion leaders share clinical data as well as their individual tips and pearls for providing the best care for patients with dry eye-associated MGD.

THE TRUE PREVALENCE OF DRY EYE DISEASE

Dry eye is one of the most common disease presentations in ophthalmology and optometry, with a prevalence of up to 75% in some groups.1 Yet it is frequently underdiagnosed, with as many as 3% of Americans with symptomatic dry eye disease (DED) not receiving treatment.2

“If we start to ask the proper questions, and if we truly become good listeners as eye care practitioners, a lot of our patients in our exam rooms have DED,” said Cynthia Matossian, MD, FACS.

Identifying these patients is critical because they experience a range of symptoms that significantly affect well-being and negatively impact daily activities that will only worsen if left untreated.3 Symptoms include stinging, burning, and fluctuations in vision that slow reading speed.4

Leslie O’Dell, OD, FAAO, recommends paying close attention to clues for fluctuating vision at the slit lamp, even if a patient hasn’t complained of dry eye symptoms. “Patients will blink and comment that their vision is better, but I didn’t change the refraction,” she explained. “That isn’t normal. When you blink your eyes, you should not have a significant change in vision. It should remain stable between blinks.”

In a long-term retrospective study of 107 men and 154 women who reported a DED diagnosis, 46% experienced fluctuating vision, 75% reported symptoms of discomfort (which includes both dryness and irritation), and 90% reporting using artificial tears.5

“[DED] increases absenteeism from work, and people are not as productive,” Dr. Matossian said. “If their eyes are hurting, they’re constantly closing their eyes or rereading the same paragraph because they can't focus on it.”

Many patients with DED don’t realize they have symptoms. To find those patients, Dr. O’Dell asks patients if they think of their eyes during the mid to late workday or if they can feel them. “Usually they’ll say they do; they feel tired,” she said.

“You shouldn’t be able to feel your eyes,” Kelly K. Nichols, OD, MPH, PhD, FAAO, added. “They should be invisible to you in terms of feeling. If a patient can feel them, there is something wrong. There are all sorts of ways of garnering symptom information from patients that can be useful.”

Men and women are equally affected by DED until around age 45 years, when dry eye becomes more prevalent in women at almost a 2:1 ratio.2 In addition to sex and older age, other predisposing factors include the environment (eg, low humidity and air conditioning), systemic medications, topical ocular medication including preservatives, previous ocular surgery (eg, LASIK and cataract surgery), contact lens wear, systemic diseases (eg, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis), and cosmetics (eg, mascara and eyelash extensions).6,7 Although older age is still a primary risk factor for DED, the age of the dry eye population is shifting to younger patients—including children.

“Dry eye is not an old person's disease anymore,” Dr. Nichols said. “Therefore, standardizing how you do your routine exams across all ages is really important.”

Dr. Nichols and colleagues recently looked at tear film and meibomian gland characteristics in 225 children age 8 to 17 years. Although 15% reported ocular discomfort, 39% of the upper and 39% of the lower eyelids had meibomian gland dropout across all patients.8 Electronic device use did not correlate with meibomian gland dropout in this specific study, but other studies have found a link between excess “screen time” and the development of DED, which has only been exacerbated due to the COVID-19 pandemic.9-11

“On average, our blink rate significantly drops from about 22 to about 4 blinks per minute when we're staring at a monitor. That decrease and drop then interferes with the meibum coming out of the meibomian glands because they're not getting that muscular activity of the lids blinking. As a result, the meibum stagnates, alters its viscosity, and the glands become inspissated,” Dr. Matossian explained.

Staring at a screen may also cause the eyes to open wider than normal, subjecting them to more evaporation, which can worsen dry eye symptoms.

“Kids do have dry eye,” Dr. Nichols said. “When you think about the lifetime of their eyes, dry eye is really important to try to address because of their age. You want their vision and the comfort of their eyes to be good. It's really important to look for it in younger kids.”

Another risk factor that clinicians may not think of is the use of CPAP machines for patients with sleep apnea. “No matter how good of a fit it has around the nose and mouth, there's always some level of retrograde air flow loss that escapes directly to the eye, affecting the tear film,” Dr. Matossian explained.

THE LINK BETWEEN DED AND MGD

The vicious cycle of dry eye consists of many pathways.12 The tear film consists of three layers: the lipid, aqueous, and mucus. Tears provide a smooth, refractive surface for optimal vision, help maintain ocular surface health, protect the cornea, and provide lubrication. The lipid layer stabilizes the tear film and reduces tear evaporation. Meibomian gland function is a critical factor in maintaining ocular surface health and tear film stability.13,14 Meibomian glands are in the upper and lower eyelids. With each complete blink, eyelid muscles release meibum, a protective lipid, from the glands. The upper lid then helps spread meibum across the ocular surface.

If the function of the meibomian glands is disrupted, the quality and quantity of meibum is compromised, which in turn affects ocular surface health, causing hyperosmolarity, apoptosis, and cell damage on the ocular surface. Known as meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD), obstruction of the meibomian glands is a primary cause of ocular surface disease, affecting about 40% of patients.15,16

“MGD-related changes in the tear lipid layer leads to tear film instability, tear hyperosmolarity, and death of conjunctival and corneal cells via apoptosis. As a compensatory response to tear hyperosmolarity, we get this chronic neural drive stimulating the lacrimal gland and accessory glands, and this leads to neurogenic inflammation,” said Jay S. Pepose, MD, PhD. “Then, through the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, there is release of cytokines and activation of matrix metalloproteinases. We then we lose goblet cells, which leads to more tear film instability. You see how this becomes a self-perpetuating cycle.”

Patients will have trouble getting a healthy oil layer if the glands are clogged and the lipid looks like toothpaste. “They’re going to be chronically dry and evaporating,” Kenneth A. Beckman, MD, said.

Diagnosing DED and MGD

Many patients don’t realize their complaints are dry eye related, therefore clinicians should listen for subtle verbal clues.

“Some patients will say, ‘I stop to close my eyes in the evening’ or ‘I need to take my contact lenses out, because I just can’t see anymore,’” Dr. Nichols said. “That’s because they’re not surfacing that contact lenses with tears. If a patient says these things, that’s a red flag.”

MGD can be graded by the area of loss (Figure 1) or by classifying the disease as mild, moderate, or severe.17

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Figure 1. Staging of progressive loss of meibomian gland structure with meibography examples.17

“Sometimes the meibomian glands can look really healthy, but they could be dysfunctional,” Dr. Matossian said. “Don't let the architecture fool you. They can be pristine in architecture, yet nonfunctional.”

To properly assess the meibomian glands, clinicians should perform the “look, lift, push, and pull” technique during an exam: look at the lids, blink, lashes, and interpalpebral surface; lift the upper eyelid; push on the glands to assess the health of the meibum; and pull on the lids.

“Not only do you want to look at structure, you also want to examine the lid margin for capped glands, cicatricial changes, telangiectasias, and maybe the lid getting pulled posteriorly. Those are all tip-offs that something's not right with the meibomian glands,” Dr. O’Dell said.

Before manually expressing the gland in the office, Dr. Nichols recommends that clinicians warm them up with a mask. Pressure on the glands should be gentle, but firm and consistent; the lid margin should not redden with pressure.

“When you do any kind of expression, you have to be patient,” Dr. Nichols said. “If you use your finger, cotton swab, or expression tool, you have to hold it there for a little bit and wait. You should also do more than one pass to fully assess the quality of the secretion.”

Corneal staining, tear breakup time, tear osmolarity, and matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) testing should also be performed.18 Dr. Matossian recommends that clinicians use meibography, which can tell you the percentage of gland loss in patients and track their progress over time.

“These diagnostic tools really help us as physicians cinch the diagnosis. It helps patients see their meibography, see that red strip on their MMP-9 test, or see the abnormal tear osmolarity numbers,” she said. “We need diagnostics to monitor the effect of our treatment as well as help the patient and us make the proper diagnosis.”

Dr. Pepose agrees that meibography is an important diagnostic tool, especially for patient education to help motivate them to care for their chronic condition.

“The analogy that I give is going to the dentist,” Dr. Pepose explained. “When you go to the dentist, they do a deep cleaning using ultrasound and equipment that you don’t have at home. You undergo this office treatment periodically because you want to maintain the health of your gums and your teeth, but you still have to brush your teeth and floss at home as maintenance therapy. The message I give to patients is that MGD is a chronic condition, and they must do their part. Some of that will be done through home care, and some will be done in the office.”

Grading with meibography is subjective, however, which may present challenges for clinicians due to a lack of consistency.

“There has been quite a bit of research looking at the repeatability of gradeability of meibography,” Dr. Nichols said. “It's not great, one person (grader) compared to another. But if you practice and work on your consistency, you do improve.”

For these reasons, there is great interest in using some artificial intelligence-based approaches to diagnose MGD.19 Researchers have implemented deep learning algorithms into automated grading of meibomian glands, but these have yet to be employed in a clinical setting.20,21

“The end goal is to have a computer grade MGD or grade a meibomian gland image reliably so a clinician doesn’t have to. That way the computer can give you a number that you can track over time,” Dr. Nichols explained. “We're not that far off, but it doesn't exist right now. In the meantime, we need to practice being better within ourselves at grading so that you can be consistent between visits.”

Because many patients, 20% or more,22 are asymptomatic and may not believe they have MGD, Dr. Matossian recommends showing the patient an enlarged photo of their eyelid margin so they can see the clogged glands for themselves.

“If the patient doesn’t believe that there’s something wrong, do you think they're going to pay for medications out-of-pocket that they’ll have to use chronically or agree to cash pay procedures to help their meibomian glands?” Dr. Matossian asked. “Absolutely not. It's a chronic disease. We already know compliance really goes downhill with most chronic diseases. If they don't see it, they're not going to buy into it.”

CURRENT AND FUTURE TREATMENTS FOR MGD

The first step in determining a treatment regimen for MGD is addressing its underlying pathophysiology.12

“There are two forms of MGD,” Dr. Pepose said. “We see patients who have inspissation of the meibomian glands and hyposecrete, and then there are patients with rosacea, for example, who  hypersecrete. In both cases, the consistency of the meibum is changed.”

Treatments for MGD are listed in the Table and include antibiotics (including macrolides and tetracyclines), steroids, cyclosporine, essential fatty acids, diquafosol, intraductal meibomian gland probing, electronic heating devices, intense pulsed light therapy, and electrotherapy.19

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Topical or systemic antibiotics are useful because with inspissation, meibomian gland secretions convert from unsaturated lipids that melt at body temperature to saturated fats that further inspissate the meibomian glands and promote growth of bacteria. Commensal bacteria secrete esterases and lipases that changes meibum viscosity and break down lipids from soaps to fatty acids, leading to inflammation, hyperkeratinization, and a foamy tear film. Topical azithromycin or systemic doxycycline or azithromycin are useful in altering fatty acid metabolism and reduce the expression of matrix metalloproteinases and inflammatory cytokines.23,24

Prescription immunomodulators have been available for years, with more options on the horizon, and include cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion 0.05%, lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5%, cyclosporine ophthalmic solution 0.09% formulated with nanomicelle technology, and preservative-free compounded cyclosporine 0.1% ophthalmic emulsion in chondroitin sulfate.25-29 Short-course topical corticosteroids may have a role, either as induction therapy along with cyclosporine or lifitegrast or as brief treatment with lid hygiene in moderate and severe MGD.30

Although generic immunomodulators are on the market, they have not been available long enough for clinicians to have a strong handle on any meaningful differences in terms of efficacy and tolerability.

“I know a few of my patients have actually been switched from branded to generic immunomodulators, but it's a very small number, smaller than I would've anticipated,” Dr. O’Dell said. “My concern with branded versus generic is tolerance effectiveness. I think the generic would have more burning and stinging.”

In-office procedures include thermal pulsation system (TPS), intense pulsed light (IPL), and micro-blepharo-exfoliation. The TPS delivers heat and pressure to the meibomian glands to liquify obstructed meibum and has been shown to improve meibomian gland score, tear breakup time, and OSDI scores.31-33 Patients also find it comfortable, comparing it to getting a facial.

“I’ve had patients fall asleep while getting it,” Dr. Beckman said. “Although it may not cure them, some patients will repeat the procedure in the same way that someone may go to the chiropractor or get a massage periodically. It feels good in the moment, and it lasts for a while.”

Dr. Matossian recommends putting patients on a short-course topical steroid or NSAIDs after the TPS procedure to extend the anti-inflammatory effect. “We’ve just evacuated all this inflamed content out of the glands after pulsation,” she said. “I like to cover it with 7 days of NSAIDs or steroids.”

A recent study assessed the impact of the TPS on astigmatism management in patients with MGD undergoing cataract surgery, finding that after a single treatment, the TPS reduced astigmatism in 24%. A little more than half of patients (52%) had more astigmatism, and 24% had no change in astigmatism.34 These results underscore the importance of stabilizing the tear film before determining the astigmatism management method and toric IOL power and axis preoperatively.

“You need to address the ocular surface before surgery,” Dr. Beckman said. “The PHACO study by Trattler et al looked at a number of preoperative cataract patients, all comers, without regard to their diagnosis of dry eyes. About 20% had a preexisting diagnosis of dry eyes, but about 75% had corneal staining. About half had central corneal staining, and a high percentage of them had a tear breakup time of less than 5 seconds.35 You have to look for these problems, and you have to treat them aggressively before you go to surgery.”

The IPL is a drug-free, drop-free, light-based treatment that targets inflammation, the root cause of MGD, by closing of abnormal blood vessels that perpetuate inflammation by leaking proinflammatory mediators.36 The IPL is particularly effective in patients with severe MGD, but clinicians should be mindful of skin pigmentation.37 The in-office micro-blepharo-exfoliation system uses a medical grade micro-sponge to remove debris from the eyelids while concurrently exfoliating the lash base. A tool containing an oscillating soft tip can be used at home as well to remove biofilm buildup from the lid margin.38

In recent years, there’s been some discussion of the effectiveness of omega-3. The DREAM study found no statistically significant difference between patients taking omega-3 and placebo for DED at 6 and 12 months.39

“There were mixed interpretations of that study,” Dr. Nichols explained. “The moral of that story has turned out to be, you can't just necessarily say that omegas don't work, but do you want to continue to prescribe them? Many clinicians continue to recommend them to their DED patients.”

Dr. Nichols has found that her patients notice a difference in their dry eye symptoms when they stop taking omega-3.

“It’s not necessarily just that their eyes feel different, it's their joints and everything else,” Dr. Nichols said. “People do generally think they're beneficial otherwise than just for the eyes.”

“DED is complex,” Dr. Matossian said. “In my opinion, it’s putting pieces of the puzzle in terms of different treatment modalities to attack these various arms that contribute to the entity. That's what I love about treating DED; it's not cookie-cutter. You really have to be cerebral about it and customize the treatment for each patient's level of disease and presentation of the disease.”

Adding to its complexity is the fact that there may be more than one issue at play. “You need to find the underlying problem, and then approach each one individually,” Dr. Beckman said. “The patient may be aqueous deficient, they may have MGD, they may have goblet cell issues on their conjunctiva, or they may have a totally normal surface but have a poor blink. You have to treat all of them.”

Future Directions of MGD Treatment

Several agents are being studied for the treatment of MGD, including topical azithromycin, AZR-MD-001, CTB-006, and NOV03. Topical azithromycin is especially useful in cases of MGD in association with rosacea as it has an anti-inflammatory action and properties that help control bacterial flora. Although azithromycin is available in the United States, it’s for the treatment of conjunctivitis and has not gone through a registration study for MGD specifically. A phase 4 study on azithromycin on tear film thickness in MGD is currently recruiting (NCT03162497).40

AZR-MD-001 is a novel formulation of selenium sulfide under development for MGD (NCT03652051).41 A phase 2 study on AZR-MD-001 met its primary endpoints of improvements in signs and symptoms of MGD.42

“The mechanism of action makes sense,” Dr. Pepose said. “It promotes the breakdown of disulfide bonds in keratin, slows the production of abnormal keratin, and stimulates meibum production.

“When you think of a patient who has keratin plaques plugging the meibomian gland orifices on the lid margin, and you just want to scrape it off and do a little lid debridement, that is the kind of patient AZR-MD-001 might benefit,” Dr. Pepose continued. “You can imagine that the meibomian gland orifices, the central ducts, and the meibum matrix are getting blocked with keratin that's abnormal. If keratins are being upregulated, and you want to clear that out rather than scraping the plugs off, this treatment might hit that mark.”

CBT-006 is a molecule under development that can dissolve cholesterol and lipids deposited in meibomian glands (NCT04884243).43 If approved, the investigational drug NOV03 would be the first drug to treat both DED and MGD. NOV03 is 100% perfluorohexyloctane and is intended to stabilize the lipid layer and penetrate the meibomian glands. NOV03 uses water-free technology to prevent tear evaporation, restore tear film balance, and potentially dissolve thickened meibum (NCT04567329).44

“We have a lot to look forward to,” Dr. Pepose said. “I think that we certainly all would agree that we need more in our armamentarium for MGD, particularly for chronic use to help maintain patients.”

CASE DISCUSSION

Patient With Contact Lens Discomfort

A 51-year-old White man presents for a routine vision exam with increased mid- to late-day discomfort from his multifocal contact lenses. He is a sales executive who spends many hours a day on digital devices and driving on the highway. He is concerned about the comfort of his contact lenses and is considering moving to full-time use of his glasses. His vision is 20/20 OU, osmolarity is 311 mOsm/L OD and 325 mOsm/L OS, SPEED test score was 16 out of 28, and his tear breakup time was 5.8 OD and 3.8 OS. No MMP-9 was detected, but he does have meibomian gland drop out with 4 MGLYS OD and 2 MGLYS OS.

“In contact lens wearing patients, 10 to 12 glands should be active for that patient to feel comfortable in their lenses,” Dr. O’Dell said.

Figure 2 shows meibography imaging, which Dr. O’Dell classified as “monochromic.”

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Figure 2. Meibography imaging in patient with contact lens discomfort.

“I would call that thin lipid,” she continued. “It’s not perfect, but it’s not horrific.”

Dr. O’Dell treated the patient with LipiFlow, and his SPEED score improved to 0 out of 28. His contact lens comfort also improved.

“His signs and symptoms improved, and his MGLYS went from 4 to 10 OD and 2 to 6 OS. He may not be at the end of his DED journey and could have coexisting rosacea. I may decide to add treatments after continued follow-up,” Dr. O’Dell said. “The take-home message is when you have a patient complaining about contact lens discomfort, evaluate their meibomian glands before switching their lenses.”

Cataract Surgery for a Patient With MGD

A patient was referred to a cataract surgeon for surgery from the optometrist requesting a toric intraocular lens. The patient complains of decreased vision; difficulty reading, which is worse at the end of the day; dryness and irritation; and tearing and mattering in his lashes in the morning. The slit lamp exam reveals thickened meibomian secretions with plugging and debris in the tear film and lashes with rapid tear breakup time. Topography (Figure 3A) shows an irregular oblique astigmatism.

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Figure 3. Topography in a patient with MGD referred for cataract surgery before (A) and after (B) treatment.

“If you look at the top left on the axial photo, there’s a red hotspot,” Dr. Beckman said. “That’s not a classic bowtie astigmatism. Then in the second picture on the right of the first topography, you see the Placido disc. If you look at the corresponding location, there's an indentation or a divot in the mires. This is a red flag and jumps out at me as something’s wrong.”

Dr. Pepose and Dr. Matossian agreed.

“If you move forward with cataract surgery, you're going to end up either overtreating or undertreating, but probably overtreating,” Dr. Matossian said. “It could be as pseudo-astigmatism due to the dry spot.”

The patient was treated with warm compresses, lid scrubs, preservative-free tears, and azithromycin for 2 weeks, which improved secretions, staining, and tear breakup time. Upon repeat topography, the hot spot disappeared and the astigmatism reduced from 3.00 D to .50 D.

“This patient had 2.50 D of pseudoastigmatism strictly from tear film instability,” Dr. Matossian said.

The panel concluded that the patient was not a candidate for toric lenses, opting for a simple aspheric monofocal instead. Dr. Pepose also urged caution when considering this untreated patient for a presbyopia-correcting intraocular lens (IOL) “because in the setting of MGD and tear film instability it could result in fluctuating vision, scatter, and complaint of low contrast and ghosting of the image.”

The panel stated that the take-home message of this case is to treat the ocular surface prior to cataract surgery. Not treating the ocular surface will result in inaccurate IOL calculations. “We would have been completely wrong with the IOL selection,” Dr. Beckman said. 

PANEL Q&A

Q: If a patient comes in for a cataract evaluation and you see staining, inflamed dry eye, or high osmolarity, how do you prepare their ocular surface for surgery?

Jay S. Pepose, MD, PhD: I would pulse them with a topical steroid, but I would concomitantly put them on something that can be sustained long term. For example, I might put them on a steroid with lifitegrast or a steroid with a cyclosporine. Then I would bring them back and repeat biometry.

Cynthia Matossian, MD, FACS: I would treat very aggressively, perhaps do an in-office procedure, and get them on a steroid short term. I also explain that they have two diseases: cataract and dry eye. I tell them that I can cure the cataract but not the dry eye; they will need to treat the dry eye forever to control it. I don’t hide these facts from my patients.

Q: Is it necessary to give every patient who comes in for cataract evaluation MMP-9 or test tear osmolarity or do you only test the patients who have staining?

Kenneth A. Beckman, MD: You should start with a questionnaire. I do like to do staining and assess tear breakup time. I also get an osmolarity for my cataract evaluations. I don't routinely do InflammaDry MMP-9 testing right off the bat. However, if I find that I need to get them started on treatment, I may do that at the follow-up visit. To me, the most important test is the staining because that is what will throw off your K readings and topography resulting in inaccurate calculations.

Dr. Pepose: Particularly, central staining is going to have a major impact. I look not only at osmolarity, but at the difference between the two eyes with regard to osmolarity and if the difference is 8 mOsm/L or more, that is a red flag.

Dr. Beckman: That's an important point; you need to check osmolarity in both eyes, even if you're only operating on one. We talk about an abnormal osmolarity being high, but there’s also an intra-eye difference. You can have two normal osmolarities, one could be 275 mOsm/L and the other 295 mOsm/L, but you shouldn't have that kind of variance between eyes.

Dr. Matossian: I agree; I check both eyes. I also do MMP-9 as well tear osmolarity and meibography. Those are my standard triad. Every cataract consult is a dry eye consult for me.

Dr. Beckman: We have to recognize that not all of these tests are available, and there's a cost to them. MMP-9 is not a requirement. To me, the requirement is thinking about dry eye and asking the questions. Staining and measuring tear breakup time are easy; the other tests are preference. Of course, I would like to do every test during a dry eye workup, but each one I do potentially interferes with something else. Once you do the osmolarity, you irritate. Is it going to trigger reflex tearing? You have to be practical.

Q: When do you switch the patient to a different contact lens versus push harder for dry eye solutions?

Leslie O’Dell, OD, FAAO: I still am a big believer of daily wear contacts. If a patient is wearing a monthly lens or an extended-wear lens, I might make that jump to a daily wear while I'm improving the lipid. You can change two things at once.

Kelly Nichols, OD, MPH, PhD, FAAO: I agree that you can change two things at once. However, you shouldn’t have the mindset of just changing the contact lens because that will not address the underlying conditions. Years ago in contact lens surveys, when asked what to do with dry eye patients, changing the lens was the first recommendation, followed by changing the contact solution. Third down the line was starting a dry eye therapeutic. Now that option is moving up the list. People are starting to think of moving to daily disposables, addressing the meibomian glands in their patients, or reducing inflammation by adding an immunomodulator at the same time. Going to a daily disposable modality is probably the easiest thing first, but you have to treat the underlying condition.

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25. Rhee MK, Mah FS. Clinical utility of cyclosporine (CsA) ophthalmic emulsion 0.05% for symptomatic relief in people with chronic dry eye: a review of the literature. Clin Ophthalmol. 2017;11:1157-1166. Published 2017 Jun 21.

26. Kim HY, Lee JE, Oh HN, Song JW, Han SY, Lee JS. Clinical efficacy of combined topical 0.05% cyclosporine A and 0.1% sodium hyaluronate in the dry eyes with meibomian gland dysfunction. Int J Ophthalmol. 2018;11(4):593-600. Published 2018 Apr 18.

27. Tauber J, Karpecki P, Latkany R, et al. Lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5.0% versus placebo for treatment of dry eye disease: results of the randomized phase III OPUS-2 Study. Ophthalmology. 2015;122(12):2423-2431.

28. Tauber J. A 6-Week, Prospective, randomized, single-masked study of lifitegrast ophthalmic solution 5% versus thermal pulsation procedure for treatment of inflammatory meibomian gland dysfunction. Cornea. 2020;39(4):403-407.

29. Prabhasawat P, Tesavibul N, Mahawong W. A randomized double-masked study of 0.05% cyclosporine ophthalmic emulsion in the treatment of meibomian gland dysfunction. Cornea. 2012;31(12):1386-1393.

30. Lee H, Chung B, Kim KS, Seo KY, Choi BJ, Kim TI. Effects of topical loteprednol etabonate on tear cytokines and clinical outcomes in moderate and severe meibomian gland dysfunction: randomized clinical trial. Am J Ophthalmol. 2014;158(6):1172-1183.e1.

31. Finis D, Hayajneh J, König C, Borrelli M, Schrader S, Geerling G. Evaluation of an automated thermodynamic treatment (LipiFlow®) system for meibomian gland dysfunction: a prospective, randomized, observer-masked trial. Ocul Surf. 2014;12(2):146-154.

32. Blackie CA, Coleman CA, Holland EJ. The sustained effect (12 months) of a single-dose vectored thermal pulsation procedure for meibomian gland dysfunction and evaporative dry eye. Clin Ophthalmol. 2016;10:1385-1396. Published 2016 Jul 26.

33. Tauber J, Owen J, Bloomenstein M, Hovanesian J, Bullimore MA. Comparison of the iLUX and the LipiFlow for the treatment of meibomian gland dysfunction and symptoms: a randomized clinical trial. Clin Ophthalmol. 2020;14:405-418. Published 2020 Feb 12.

34. Matossian C. Impact of thermal pulsation treatment on astigmatism management and outcomes in meibomian gland dysfunction patients undergoing cataract surgery. Clin Ophthalmol. 2020;14:2283-2289. Published 2020 Aug 12.

35. Trattler WB, Majmudar PA, Donnenfeld ED, McDonald MB, Stonecipher KG, Goldberg DF. The prospective health assessment of cataract patients' ocular surface (PHACO) study: the effect of dry eye. Clin Ophthalmol. 2017;11:1423-1430. Published 2017 Aug 7.

36. Dell SJ, Gaster RN, Barbarino SC, Cunningham DN. Prospective evaluation of intense pulsed light and meibomian gland expression efficacy on relieving signs and symptoms of dry eye disease due to meibomian gland dysfunction. Clin Ophthalmol. 2017;11:817-827. Published 2017 May 2.

37. Chen C, Chen D, Chou YY, Long Q. Factors influencing the clinical outcomes of intense pulsed light for meibomian gland dysfunction. Medicine (Baltimore). 2021;100(49):e28166.

38. Siddireddy JS, Vijay AK, Tan J, Willcox M. Effect of eyelid treatments on bacterial load and lipase activity in relation to contact lens discomfort. Eye Contact Lens. 2020;46(4):245-253.

39. Dry Eye Assessment and Management Study Research Group, Asbell PA, Maguire MG, et al. n-3 fatty acid supplementation for the treatment of dry eye disease. N Engl J Med. 2018;378(18):1681-1690.

40. Effect of Topical Azithromycin on Tear Film Thickness in Patients With Meibomian Gland Dysfunction. Clinical Trial Identifier: NCT03162497. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03162497. Updated April 7, 2022. Accessed August 3, 2022.

41. A Multicenter Study Evaluating AZR-MD-001 in Patients With Meibomian Gland Dysfunction and Evaporative Dry Eye Disease (DED). Clinical Trial Identifier: NCT03652051. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03652051. Updated April 27, 2022. Accessed August 3, 2022.

42. Azura Ophthalmics Announces Positive Topline Results From Phase 2 Program of Investigational Treatment for MGD. https://eyewire.news/articles/azura-ophthalmics-announces-positive-topline-results-from-phase-2-program-of-the-companys-investigational-treatment-for-mgd. Published March 3, 2021. Accessed August 3, 2022.

43. Safety, Efficacy and Pharmacokinetics of CBT-006 in Patients With Meibomian Gland Dysfunction. Clinical Trial Identifier: NCT04884243. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04884243. Updated June 7, 2022. Accessed August 3, 2022.

44. Effect of NOV03 on Signs and Symptoms of Dry Eye Disease Associated With Meibomian Gland Dysfunction (Mojave Study). Clinical Trial Identifier: NCT04567329. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04567329. Updated May 11, 2022. Accessed August 3, 2022.

Details
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  • Overview

    Content Source

    This continuing education activity captures content from two live satellite symposia.

    Activity Description

    This supplement summarizes two presentations by well-known experts in meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD)–related dry eye disease (DED). The faculty reviews diagnostic and treatment approaches and shares additional insights through case discussions.

    Target Audience

    This certified CE/CME activity is designed for optometrists and ophthalmologists.

    This activity is supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Bausch + Lomb.

  • Learning Objectives

    Upon completion of this activity, the participant should be able to:

    • Summarize the clinical signs and symptoms of dry eye disease
    • Recognize and explain meibomian gland dysfunction-related dry eye disease pathology
    • Discuss the current and emerging methods in diagnosing meibomian gland dysfunction
    • Develop individualized treatment plans for patients with dry eye disease
    • Describe the mechanisms of action for current and emerging agents
    • Accreditation

      This educational activity is provided by Evolve Medical Education LLC (Evolve).

      Accreditation Statement
      Evolve is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

      Credit Designation Statement
      Evolve designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.25 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

      Evolve Medical Education LLC (Evolve) is an approved COPE administrator.
      This activity, COPE Activity Number 124529, is accredited by COPE for continuing education for optometrists. This course is approved for 1.25 hours CE.
      Course #: 80038-TD; 80093-TD
      Activity #: 124529

    • Participation Method

      In order to obtain credit, proceed through the program, complete the post-test, evaluation and submit for credit.

    • Faculty and Disclosures

      Kenneth A. Beckman, MD

      Kenneth A. Beckman, MD

      Director of Corneal Services
      Comprehensive Eye Care of Central Ohio
      Westerville, OH


      Cynthia Matossian, MD, FACS

      Cynthia Matossian, MD, FACS

      Founder and Medical Director 
      Matossian Eye Associates
      Doylestown, PA 
      Hopewell, NJ 


      Kelly K. Nichols, OD, MPH, PhD, FAAO

      Kelly K. Nichols, OD, MPH, PhD, FAAO

      Dean, School of Optometry

      University of Alabama at Birmingham

      Birmingham, AL


      Leslie O’Dell, OD, FAAO

      Leslie O’Dell, OD, FAAO

      Medical Director

      Director of Clinical Research

      Medical Optometry America

      York, PA


      Jay S. Pepose, MD, PhD

      Jay S. Pepose, MD, PhD

      Director, Pepose Vision Institute
      Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology
      Washington University School of Medicine
      St. Louis, MO



      DISCLOSURE POLICY
      It is the policy of Evolve that faculty and other individuals who are in the position to control the content of this activity disclose any real or apparent financial relationships relating to the topics of this educational activity. Evolve has full policies in place that will identify and mitigate all financial relationships prior to this educational activity.

      The following faculty/staff members have the following financial relationships with ineligible companies.

      Kenneth A. Beckman, MD, has had a financial agreement or affiliation with the following ineligible companies in the form of Consultant: Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Alcon Vision, Allergan, Avellino Labs, Bausch + Lomb, Biotissue, Bruder, Carl Zeiss Meditec, Dompé, Eyepoint, Eyevance, Glaukos, Glint, Johnson & Johnson, Kala Pharmaceuticals, Leo Pharma, Novaliq, Novartis, Ocular Science, Ocular Therapeutix, Omeros, Refocus, Rx Sight, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, TearLab, Trefoil, and Visus.

      Cynthia Matossian, MD, FACS, has a financial agreement or affiliation with the following ineligible companies in the form of Consultant: Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Alcon, Allergan, Aramis Biosciences, Bausch + Lomb, Bruder Healthcare, Carl Zeiss Meditec, Checked-Up, Conclusn, Dompé, EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Eyevance, Glint Pharmaceuticals, Guardion Health Services, Imprimis Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson Vision, Kala Pharmaceuticals, LacriSciences Vision, legrande Health, Lenstec, lumenis, Marco, MDBackline, MiCare, MYZE, Novartis, NuLids, Ocular Science, Olympic, Omeros, Osmotica Pharmaceuticals, Physician Recommended Nutriceuticals, Quidel, Reger-Eyes, StepWise Medical, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, TearLab, TearScience, TissueTech, Visionology, and Visus Therapeutics. Grant/Research Support: Dompé, Imprimis Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson, and Novartis. Speaker's Bureau: Alcon, Allergan, Carl Zeiss Meditec, EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Eyevance, Guardion Health Services, Imprimis Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson Vision, Kala Pharmaceuticals, LacriSciences Vision, Lumenis, Novartis, NuLids, Olympic, Omeros, Physician Recommended Nutriceuticals, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, TearLab, TearScience, and TissueTech. Shareholder: Checked-Up, Physician Recommended Nutriceuticals, and Strathspey Crown.

      Kelly K. Nichols, OD, MPH, PhD, FAAO, has had a financial relationship or affiliation with the following ineligible companies in the form of Consultant: Aerie Pharmaceuticals, Allergan/Abbvie, Axim, Bausch + Lomb, Bruder, Dompé, HanAllBio, Kala Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Osmotica/RVL, Oyster Point, Sight Sciences, Tarsus, Tear Film Innovations/Alcon, TearSolutions, Thea, TopiVert, Visionology, and YuYu Pharma. Grant/Research Support: Allergan/AbbVie, Kala Pharmaceuticals, and TearScience.

      Leslie O’Dell, OD, FAAO, has had a financial agreement or affiliation with the following ineligible companies in the form of Consultant: Sight Sciences and Bausch + Lomb. Speaker’s Bureau: Aerie Pharmaceuticals and Allergan/AbbVie.

      Jay S. Pepose, MD, PhD, has had a financial agreement or affiliation with the following ineligible companies in the form of Consultant: Acufocus, Allergan/AbbVie, Bausch + Lomb, Johnson & Johnson Vision, Kala Pharmaceuticals, Mimetogen, Novartis, Ocuphire Pharma, Stuart Therapeutics, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, and Thea.

      The Evolve staff, planners, reviewer, and writers have no financial relationships with ineligible companies.

    • Disclaimer

      OFF-LABEL STATEMENT
      This educational activity may contain discussion of published and/or investigational uses of agents that are not indicated by the FDA. The opinions expressed in the educational activity are those of the faculty. Please refer to the official prescribing information for each product for discussion of approved indications, contraindications, and warnings.

      DISCLAIMER
      The views and opinions expressed in this educational activity are those of the faculty and do not necessarily represent the views of Evolve, Cataract & Refractive Surgery Today, MillennialEYE, Modern Optometry, or Bausch + Lomb.

      This activity is designed for educational purposes. Participants have a responsibility to utilize this information to enhance their professional development to improve patient outcomes. Conclusions drawn by the participants should be derived from careful consideration of all available scientific information. The participant should use his/her clinical judgment, knowledge, experience, and diagnostic decision-making before applying any information, whether provided here or by others, for any professional use.

    • System Requirements

      • Supported Browsers (2 most recent versions):
        • Google Chrome for Windows, Mac OS, iOS, and Android
        • Apple Safari for Mac OS and iOS
        • Mozilla Firefox for Windows, Mac OS, iOS, and Android
        • Microsoft Edge for Windows
      • Recommended Internet Speed: 5Mbps+

    • Publication Dates

      Expiration Date:

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