Intraoperative aberrometry-based aphakia refraction in patients with cataract: status and options

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Intraoperative aberrometry-based aphakia refraction in patients with cataract: status and options. / Huelle, Jan O; Druchkiv, Vasyl; Habib, Nabil E; Richard, Gisbert; Katz, Toam; Linke, Stephan J.

In: BRIT J OPHTHALMOL, Vol. 101, No. 2, 02.2017, p. 97-102.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

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Huelle, JO, Druchkiv, V, Habib, NE, Richard, G, Katz, T & Linke, SJ 2017, 'Intraoperative aberrometry-based aphakia refraction in patients with cataract: status and options', BRIT J OPHTHALMOL, vol. 101, no. 2, pp. 97-102. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjophthalmol-2015-307594

APA

Huelle, J. O., Druchkiv, V., Habib, N. E., Richard, G., Katz, T., & Linke, S. J. (2017). Intraoperative aberrometry-based aphakia refraction in patients with cataract: status and options. BRIT J OPHTHALMOL, 101(2), 97-102. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjophthalmol-2015-307594

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Bibtex

@article{83dd16a329854ff29da3b6b92a40dbcb,
title = "Intraoperative aberrometry-based aphakia refraction in patients with cataract: status and options",
abstract = "AIM: To explore the application of intraoperative wavefront aberrometry (IWA) for aphakia-based biometry using three existing formulae derived from autorefractive retinoscopy and introducing new improved formulae.METHODS: In 74 patients undergoing cataract surgery, three repeated measurements of aphakic spherical equivalent (SE) were taken. All measurements were objectively graded for their quality and evaluated with the 'limits of agreement' approach. ORs were calculated and analysis of variance was applied. The intraocular lens (IOL) power that would have given the target refraction was back-calculated from manifest refraction at 3 months postoperatively. Regression analysis was performed to generate two aphakic SE-based formulae for predicting this IOL. The accuracy of the formulae was determined by comparing them to conventional biometry and published aphakia formulae.RESULTS: In 32 eyes, three consecutive aphakic measurements were successful. Objective parameters of IWA map quality significantly impacted measurement variability (p<0.05). The limits of agreement of repeated aphakic SE readings were +0.66 dioptre (D) and -0.69 D. Intraoperative biometry by our formula resulted in 25% and 53% of all cases ±0.50D and ±1.00 D within SE target, respectively. A second formula that took axial length (AL) into account resulted in improved ratios of 41% and 70%, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: A reliable application of IWA to calculate IOL power during routine cataract surgery may not be feasible given the high rate of measurement failures and the large variations of the readings. To enable reliable IOL calculation from IWA, measurement precision must be improved and aphakic IOL formulae need to be fine-tuned.",
author = "Huelle, {Jan O} and Vasyl Druchkiv and Habib, {Nabil E} and Gisbert Richard and Toam Katz and Linke, {Stephan J}",
note = "Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1136/bjophthalmol-2015-307594",
language = "English",
volume = "101",
pages = "97--102",
journal = "BRIT J OPHTHALMOL",
issn = "0007-1161",
publisher = "BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Intraoperative aberrometry-based aphakia refraction in patients with cataract: status and options

AU - Huelle, Jan O

AU - Druchkiv, Vasyl

AU - Habib, Nabil E

AU - Richard, Gisbert

AU - Katz, Toam

AU - Linke, Stephan J

N1 - Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/

PY - 2017/2

Y1 - 2017/2

N2 - AIM: To explore the application of intraoperative wavefront aberrometry (IWA) for aphakia-based biometry using three existing formulae derived from autorefractive retinoscopy and introducing new improved formulae.METHODS: In 74 patients undergoing cataract surgery, three repeated measurements of aphakic spherical equivalent (SE) were taken. All measurements were objectively graded for their quality and evaluated with the 'limits of agreement' approach. ORs were calculated and analysis of variance was applied. The intraocular lens (IOL) power that would have given the target refraction was back-calculated from manifest refraction at 3 months postoperatively. Regression analysis was performed to generate two aphakic SE-based formulae for predicting this IOL. The accuracy of the formulae was determined by comparing them to conventional biometry and published aphakia formulae.RESULTS: In 32 eyes, three consecutive aphakic measurements were successful. Objective parameters of IWA map quality significantly impacted measurement variability (p<0.05). The limits of agreement of repeated aphakic SE readings were +0.66 dioptre (D) and -0.69 D. Intraoperative biometry by our formula resulted in 25% and 53% of all cases ±0.50D and ±1.00 D within SE target, respectively. A second formula that took axial length (AL) into account resulted in improved ratios of 41% and 70%, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: A reliable application of IWA to calculate IOL power during routine cataract surgery may not be feasible given the high rate of measurement failures and the large variations of the readings. To enable reliable IOL calculation from IWA, measurement precision must be improved and aphakic IOL formulae need to be fine-tuned.

AB - AIM: To explore the application of intraoperative wavefront aberrometry (IWA) for aphakia-based biometry using three existing formulae derived from autorefractive retinoscopy and introducing new improved formulae.METHODS: In 74 patients undergoing cataract surgery, three repeated measurements of aphakic spherical equivalent (SE) were taken. All measurements were objectively graded for their quality and evaluated with the 'limits of agreement' approach. ORs were calculated and analysis of variance was applied. The intraocular lens (IOL) power that would have given the target refraction was back-calculated from manifest refraction at 3 months postoperatively. Regression analysis was performed to generate two aphakic SE-based formulae for predicting this IOL. The accuracy of the formulae was determined by comparing them to conventional biometry and published aphakia formulae.RESULTS: In 32 eyes, three consecutive aphakic measurements were successful. Objective parameters of IWA map quality significantly impacted measurement variability (p<0.05). The limits of agreement of repeated aphakic SE readings were +0.66 dioptre (D) and -0.69 D. Intraoperative biometry by our formula resulted in 25% and 53% of all cases ±0.50D and ±1.00 D within SE target, respectively. A second formula that took axial length (AL) into account resulted in improved ratios of 41% and 70%, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: A reliable application of IWA to calculate IOL power during routine cataract surgery may not be feasible given the high rate of measurement failures and the large variations of the readings. To enable reliable IOL calculation from IWA, measurement precision must be improved and aphakic IOL formulae need to be fine-tuned.

U2 - 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2015-307594

DO - 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2015-307594

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 26892634

VL - 101

SP - 97

EP - 102

JO - BRIT J OPHTHALMOL

JF - BRIT J OPHTHALMOL

SN - 0007-1161

IS - 2

ER -