Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery
Volume 31, Issue 6 , Pages 1145-1152, June 2005

Clinical outcomes of phakic refractive lens in myopic and hyperopic eyes: 1-year results

From St. Eriks Eye Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

Accepted 8 November 2004.

Purpose

To confirm the safety, efficacy, and predictability of the surgical correction of myopia and hyperopia with the phakic refractive lens (PRL) (Medennium Inc.).

Setting

St. Eriks Eye Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.

Methods

This was a prospective clinical study of 20 eyes, 14 myopic and 6 hyperopic, that had PRL implantation at St. Eriks Eye Hospital from April to November 2002. Examinations were performed preoperatively and 1 day, 1 week, 3 months, and 1 year postoperatively. Follow-up included evaluation of the PRL rotation with retroillumination photography, evaluation of the distance between the PRL and the crystalline lens with Scheimpflug image, laser flare, endothelial cell count, uncorrected (UCVA) and best corrected (BCVA) visual acuity, residual refractive error, refractive stability, intraocular pressure, and induced cataract.

Results

Postoperatively, 11 eyes (55%) gained 1 or more lines, 5 eyes (25%) had no change, and 4 eyes (20%) lost 1 line of BCVA. No eye lost 2 or more lines. Mean UCVA was 0.87± 0.29 postoperatively. Laser flare values were highest 1 day after operation with normalization at 3 months and without changes at 1 year (P<.05). A rotation of 10 degrees or more was found in 15 eyes (75%) during the first year. The distance between the PRL and crystalline lens was considerably less at 1 year than at baseline (P<.05). There was no statistically significant endothelial cell loss induced by the PRL (P<.05). No induced cataract, glaucoma, or inflammation was observed. In 1 hyperopic eye, horizontal iris transillumination defects were noticed at 1 year.

Conclusion

Safety and efficacy indexes were high at 1-year follow-up. The PRL rotated slightly in the posterior chamber. The distance between the PRL and the crystalline lens was considerably less at 1 year than at baseline.

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 Presented at the XXXVI Nordic Congress of Ophthalmology, Malmö, Sweden, 2004.No author has a financial or proprietary interest in any material or method mentioned.Professor Bo Lindstrom contributed to the statistical analysis.

PII: S0886-3350(05)00160-4

doi:10.1016/j.jcrs.2004.11.059

Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery
Volume 31, Issue 6 , Pages 1145-1152, June 2005