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Research

Differentiating primary dry eye disease from ocular neuropathic pain: implications for symptom management

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Pages 605-611 | Received 14 Jan 2022, Published online: 25 Aug 2022
 

ABSTRACT

Clinical Relevance

Eyecare practitioners’ management of ocular surface disease is essential in managing increasing dry eye disease (DED) presentations including ocular neuropathic pain (ONP). Topical Proxymetacaine offers a simple, readily available and practical method of detecting ONP in practice and can be used to differentiate ONP from DED by eyecare practitioners, when accompanied with an anterior segment examination.

Background

Differentiating DED from ONP presents a significant opportunity to eyecare providers, allowing appropriate treatment choices for more adequate symptom control, greater patient satisfaction, and reduced emergent re-presentations. This study aims to differentiate patients presenting with DED symptoms into DED or ONP using a simple diagnostic tool, which can be used in practice to allocate appropriate treatment options for the patient’s respective condition. A comparison of the prevalence of presentations of ONP presenting with DED symptoms in hospital ophthalmology settings and in optometric primary care settings will also be made.

Methods

Patients with symptoms of DED were opportunistically recruited as they presented to ophthalmology outpatient clinics and primary care optometric services. Patients were then categorised as DED, ONP, or mixed DED/ONP based on their subjective response 30 seconds post-Proxymetacaine Hydrochloride 2% instillation.

Results

Twenty-one patients were recruited, including 12 patients from ophthalmologic outpatient clinics and nine patients from primary care optometric services. Twelve patients were identified to have primary DED, while nine patients were identified to have ONP. 43% of patients presenting with DED symptoms had features of neuropathic pain in ophthalmologic outpatient presentations compared to 44% of patients in primary care optometric services.

Conclusion

Categorising DED and ONP patients by their response to Proxymetacaine can be used as a simple diagnostic tool in guiding future patient management and can be indicative of their potential response to topical therapies. The use of topical Proxymetacaine and the resultant change in ocular pain score can facilitate selection of patients who may benefit from centrally acting neuropathic pain agents over topical ocular therapy.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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