Dry Eye Disease and personality: a systematic review
Alessandro Meduri, Emanuele Maria Merlo, Giorgio Sparacino, Laura De Luca, Maura Mancini, Giovanni William Oliverio, Paola Palino, Orlando Silvestro, Gabriella Martino, Pasquale Aragona

TL;DR
This review explores how personality traits like neuroticism affect the experience and impact of dry eye disease, highlighting the need for integrated psychological and clinical approaches.
Contribution
The paper provides a systematic synthesis of how personality traits influence dry eye disease symptom perception and quality of life.
Findings
Neuroticism and harm avoidance are linked to greater symptom burden in dry eye disease.
Personality traits influence subjective experience and clinical impact of DED.
Most studies are cross-sectional, limiting causal conclusions about personality and DED.
Abstract
Dry Eye Disease (DED) is a widespread condition associated with ocular discomfort and reduced quality of life. Personality traits may influence symptom perception, disease course and patients’ psychological adjustment, suggesting that subjectively experienced symptoms could be shaped by stable individual characteristics. This systematic review aimed to synthesize the available evidence regarding personality in individuals with DED. Following PRISMA guidelines, a systematic search was conducted in November 2025 in PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science using the terms “dry eye disease” OR “dry eye syndrome” AND “personality.” Inclusion criteria required full-text, peer-reviewed articles published in English and the use of standardized personality assessment tools. Studies were categorized according to whether DED was clinically confirmed or based on self-reported symptoms. Methodological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Surface and Contact Lens · Allergic Rhinitis and Sensitization · Ocular Infections and Treatments
