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ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Ocular Surface Disease Related to the Inflammatory and Non-Inflammatory Phases of Thyroid Eye Disease

, , , , ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 3465-3475 | Received 10 Aug 2023, Accepted 02 Nov 2023, Published online: 14 Nov 2023
 

Abstract

Purpose

This study evaluated the ocular surface disease (OSD), especially dry eye disease (DED) parameters by combining qualitative and quantitative tools, including tear matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9), in patients with Graves’ disease (GD) with and without Thyroid eye disease (TED).

Patients and Methods

A total of 17 active TED, 16 inactive TED, 16 GD without ophthalmopathy, and 16 healthy controls were included. All patients were assessed with CAS, ophthalmometry, qualitative tear MMP-9, Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI), ocular surface staining, Schirmer test, meibography, tear meniscus height, conjunctival hyperemia, and non-invasive tear film break-up time. Patients were classified into three subtypes of DED: aqueous tear deficiency, meibomian gland dysfunction (MGD) and mixed dry eye.

Results

Inactive TED was shown to be an associated factor with DED (odds ratio 14, confidence interval 2.24–87.24, p=0.0047), and presented more DED than healthy controls (87.5% versus 33.3%, p=0.0113). MGD was also more prevalent among these subjects than in healthy control (62.5% versus 6.7%; p=0.0273). No significant differences were found in other ophthalmological parameters, except for more intense conjunctival redness among active TED than GD without ophthalmopathy (p=0.0214). Qualitative MMP-9 test was more frequently positive in both eyes among active TED than in other groups (p < 0.0001).

Conclusion

Patients with GD were symptomatic and presented a high prevalence of ocular surface changes and DED, particularly the subgroup with inactive TED. Tear MMP-9 detection was associated with active TED suggesting a relationship between ocular surface changes and the initial inflammatory phase of ophthalmopathy.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge all patients who voluntarily participated in our study. We also acknowledge the financial support from FAEPEX (Research Support Fund of University of Campinas) number 92867-20. DEZ-W had a National Council of Technological and Scientific Development Scholarship (CNPq) (303068/2021-3).

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.