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Determinants of subjective patient-reported quality of vision after small-incision lenticule extraction

Authors :
Mehdi Shajari
Valerie Schmelter
Jakob Siedlecki
Siegfried G. Priglinger
Nikolaus Luft
Wolfgang J. Mayer
Martin Dirisamer
Thomas C. Kreutzer
Source :
Journal of cataract and refractive surgery. 45(11)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose To characterize patient-reported long-term quality of vision (QoV) after small-incision lenticule extraction (SMILE), and to identify potential clinical parameters that might predispose to experiencing deteriorated visual quality. Setting University Eye Hospital, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany. Design Prospective cross-sectional study. Methods For the assessment and scoring of visual symptoms, the Quality of Vision questionnaire was employed, which constitutes a clinically validated, linear-scaled 30-item instrument providing a QoV score on three scales (symptom frequency, severity, and bothersome). Subgroup analyses were performed for patient subgroups stratified by baseline characteristics (eg, age) and treatment parameters (eg, surgical refractive correction) as well as refractive outcomes (eg, residual refraction) and visual outcomes (eg, uncorrected distance visual acuity [UDVA]). Results The study comprised 394 eyes of 197 patients (117 women [59.4%], 80 men [40.6%]) were included with a mean postoperative follow-up of 24.4 months ± 14.1 (SD). The QoV scores for symptom frequency, severity, and bothersome were 34.63 ± 13.69, 29.60 ± 12.38, and 24.56 ± 16.00, respectively. Patients with a preoperative binocular corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) of 20/12.5 or better, patients who lost 1 or more lines of UDVA as compared with preoperative CDVA, patients older than the age of 40, and patients with inadvertent anisometropia more than 0.375 diopters reported worse QoV scores. Conclusion The relationship between objective clinical parameters and patient-reported subjective QoV after SMILE seems complex. Defined prognostic factors that convey a higher risk for experiencing visual disturbances were identifiable and should be discussed with patients seeking SMILE treatment during preoperative counseling.

Details

ISSN :
18734502
Volume :
45
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cataract and refractive surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0155fe6fd2cf7176ba81ee47d90aed70