Abstract

Cataract surgery, which increases perception of light, may increase melatonin secretion. Melatonin secretion has been associated with depression, diabetes, cognitive impairment, and breast cancer. To date, no evidence from a randomized clinical trial exists to support this cataract surgery hypothesis. To determine whether cataract surgery modifies the melatonin secretion at 3 months after cataract surgery in 169 adult patients. A parallel-group randomized clinical trial was conducted at a single referral center from July 1, 2014, to June 30, 2017. Data were analyzed from January 1, 2018, to March 31, 2019. Patients were aged 60 years or older, had no history of cataract surgery, and had cataracts with grade 2 or higher nuclear opacifications based on the Lens Opacities Classification System III. Analyses were based on intention to treat. Patients were randomized 1:1:1:1 to receive cataract surgery using artificial clear intraocular lens (IOL) or yellow IOL. Group 1 received prompt surgery with clear IOL, group 2, prompt surgery with yellow IOL, group 3, delayed surgery with clear IOL, and group 4, delayed surgery with yellow IOL. The intervention group consisted of groups 1 and 2, and the control group consisted of groups 3 and 4. Urinary melatonin excretion in the intervention group was measured at 3 months after surgery, and urinary melatonin excretion in the control group was measured before delayed surgery. Of the 169 randomized patients, 97 were men (57.4%). The mean (SD) age was 75.7 (6.7) years. Mean urinary melatonin excretion was calculated as standardized urinary concentration, the ratio of urinary concentration to urinary creatinine concentration (nanograms per milligram of creatinine), in the intervention group after cataract surgery. Mean urinary melatonin excretion was significantly higher than in the control group (adjusted mean difference of creatinine concentration, 0.159 log ng/mg, 95% CI, 0.045-0.273; P = .007) independent of baseline urinary melatonin excretion and potential confounders. Subgroup analysis comparing group 1 with group 3 revealed that concentration of urinary melatonin excretion in patients who received clear IOLs was higher than the control group by creatinine concentration 0.212 log ng/mg (95% CI of the difference, 0.058-0.365; P = .008). However, the difference between patients in group 2 and group 4 was not significant (adjusted mean difference for creatinine excretion, 0.083 log ng/mg, 95% CI, -0.087 to 0.253; P = .33). The difference of concentration of mean urinary melatonin excretion between patients in group 1 and those in group 2 was not significant (95% CI of the difference for creatinine concentration, -0.19 to 0.40 log ng/mg; P = .48). The findings in this study support the hypothesis that cataract surgery increases melatonin secretion. The effect of clear IOLs vs yellow IOLs on these outcomes was not shown to be different. UMIN-CTR Identifier: UMIN000014559.

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