Latest Developments in Cataract Surgery
Transcription
Latest Developments in Cataract Surgery
New Technologies In Surgery Michael L. Nordlund, MD,PhD Vice Chairman Cincinnati Eye Institute Technologies • Intacs • Collagen X-linking • Femtosecond laser & cataract surgery Keratoconus • Non-Inflammatory Corneal Ectasia • Stromal Thinning • Corneal Steepening • Myopia • Irregular Astigmatism Keratoconus • Demographics • Estimates vary from 50 to 170 per 100,000 population ! • Obscure Etiology • Heredity • Eye Rubbing • Allergies, down syndrome, atopy Histology in Keratoconus • Epithelial thinning • Loss of integrity of Bowman’s Layer • Keratocyte loss • Stromal thinning • Descemet’s breaks Historical Treatment of Keratoconus Optical Spectacles CL Specialty CL Therapeutic Lamellar kertaoplasty Penetrating keratoplasty Keratoconus Surgery • Lamellar Keratoplasty • Interface haze limits visual result • Penetrating Keratoplasty • • • Most frequent in US 4,771 cases in 2004 (US) 80-90% successful Issues ▪ Graft rejection rate 17.9% ▪ Continued astigmatism ▪ Endothelial cell loss (limited longevity of graft) ▪ Recurrence of Keratoconus Alternative Treatments of Keratoconus • INTACs • Collagen X-linking • Deep Anterior Lamellar Keratoplasty INTACS …a new Surgical Option INTACS Design Features • Precision lathe-cut to ± 0.01mm • • 150° arcs PMMA Hexagonal-shaped section of a cone ▪ R2 = 8.1 mm ▪ R1= 6.8 mm • Positioning holes for manipulation ! • Inserts placed in the stromal layer of the peripheral cornea • • • Result in a reshaping of corneal curvature The corneal bulge flattens Stromal Lamellae Thicker inserts increase flattening How INTACS Work… Inserts placed at 75% corneal depth ▪ ! Inserts separate corneal lamellae ▪ ! Separation shortens corneal arc length ▪ ! Central cornea flattens ▪ ! ▪ Increased flattening achieved with Stromal Lamellae thicker segments INTACS Mechanics INTACS for Keratoconus UCVA CF BCVA: 20/50 MR: -4.75 + 5.00 @ 20 Max K: 55.78 @ 90 Custom RGP Intolerant UCVA 20/40 BCVA: 20/25 MR: -2.00 Max K: 51.69 @ 89 RGP Tolerant Architecture Modification Architecture Modification Pentacam Images INTACS Clinical Overview • First case 1997: Joseph Colin, MD • Temporal Approach ▪ Superior thin segment : 0.25 mm; Flattens the cone ▪ Inferior thick segment : 0.45 mm; Lifts the cone • Very encouraging results ▪ Patient scheduled for immediate PKP, has been deferred 7+ years with acceptable BSCVA (Best Spectacle▪ Transplant Corrected Visual Acuity) ▪ Reduction in myopia and astigmatism ▪ Results stable over time Combined Studies 1997 to 2001 Change UCVA 78% 67% 72% 33% 22% 19% 0% European Study Siganos 0% 9% Boxer Wachler Combined Studies 1997 to 2001 Change BCVA 62% 52% 51% 45% 45% 32% 6% European Study Siganos 3% 4% Boxer Wachler CL Intolerant - Pre-Op BCVA Achieved to Complete Exam European Keratoconus Study ▪ Change in MRSE • Mean 3.1 Diopters Corrected • Range 1.6 to 8.7 Diopters ! ▪ Change in Cylinder • Mean 2.9 Diopters Corrected • Range 0 to 7.5 Diopters ! ▪ Stability of refraction achieved at 3 to 6 months • 75% within ± 1 Diopter • 50% within ± 0.5 Diopter European Keratoconus Study • 2 year data - Joseph Colin, MD – 96 of 100 eyes, initially referred for PKP, successfully implanted with INTACS and remain stable after 24 months – 100% became contact lens tolerant, some patients became correctable with spectacles and a subset required no correction – 80% have improved UCVA and 68% improved BCVA at year 2 ! • Manifest refraction, cylinder, MRSE and pachymetry continued to improve at year 2 over year 1 and preoperative exams Complications - Combined Studies • Very Few Surgical Complications Observed • Postoperative Complications – Superficial placement – Segment migration – Visual symptoms – Lack of effect • Manageable with INTACS Removal – 14/174 eyes (8%) – Majority of patients returned to preoperative refraction upon removal – Several have gone on to have successful corneal transplantation INTACS – PKP Comparison Transplant Intacs INTACS - PKP Comparison INTACS ! PKP ! ▪ Reversible Out-Patient Procedure ▪ Irreversible Procedure ▪ Time: 20-30 Minutes ▪ Time: 1 Hour ▪ Rehab Time: 1-2 Weeks ▪ Rehab Time: 12-18 Months ▪ Corneal Lamellar Procedure ▪ Intraocular Procedure ▪ Complications ▪ Complications • Unsatisfactory ring placement • Segment extrusion • Infection (All easily managed with segment removal) • Cataract, Glaucoma, Rejection • Endophthalmitis, Expulsive hemorrhage • Neovascularization, Astigmatism • Disease recurrence • Risk of viral transference INTACS - PKP Comparison PKP INTACS ▪ Endothelial cell loss, not clinically significant1 ! ▪ Provides structural integrity, PKP still an option without complication ! ▪ Outcomes: predictable, case dependent ! ! 1Two-Year Endothelial Cell Assessment following INTACS implantation, Azar et al, J Refract Surg. 2001 Sept-Oct! ▪ Significant loss of endothelial cells ! ▪ Permanently weakened cornea with risk of additional trauma ! ▪ Outcomes: unpredictable, often unstable Conclusions: INTACS Intervention can be a Viable Alternative to Transplant • Goal of INTACS is to restore functional vision • INTACS flatten cones • Effective functional refraction with soft, soft-toric, or rigid contact lenses • Asymmetrical cones are repositioned centrally • INTACS reduce higher order aberrations • • • Visual improvement can be immediate Vision stabilizes in months rather than a year or longer Potential to defer transplant INTACS Removal & Replacement Summary • Easy to remove ! • In FDA study, no complications post-removal ! • Preliminary data indicates that the patients return to their preoperative refractive error in most cases ! • Patients are able to return to their original mode of correction or to pursue an alternative refractive procedure The INTACS Procedure Ideal INTACS Patients ! Contact Lens Intolerant Keratoconus ▪ K readings 45 to 60 ▪ Contact lenses not providing functional vision ▪ Outright failure ▪ Inability to achieve 20/40 ▪ Desire to forestall central scarring ▪ Apprehensive of transplant Collagen Cross-Linking + = Collagen Cross-Linking • Natural process • May explain natural progression arrest • Accelerated by – photoactive agentriboflavin – Elevated UVA levels Cross-Linking Benefits • Arrested progression of ectasia • Corneal sterilization – Acanthamoeba – Fungus – Bacterial Cross-Linking & Ectasia • Siena study 2010 – 363 pts – 48-60 months – Mean reduction in K of 2 D – Improved BCVA of 1.9 lines – Improved UCVA of 2.7 lines – Arrest of progression Cross-Linking Risks • Haze • Delayed healing • Loss of BCVA • Endothelial damage (<400 microns) Cross-Linking Indications • Not FDA approved • Arrest of ectasia – KCN & PMD – LVC induced • Infectious keratitis – Acanthamoeba – Fungus – Severe bacteria Ideal Ectasia Patient for X-Linking • Early in disease!!! • Goal is to prevent progression to need for: – PK/DALK – Specialty CL – RGP CL Modern Keratoconus Management • Early disease – X-linking – Glasses/SCL per pt choice • Moderate disease (CL dependent +/-intolerance) – X-linking +/- Intacs – CL • Advanced disease (CL dependent, intolerant, =/-scarring) – Intacs – DALK Laser Cataract Surgery Traditional Cataract Surgery • Corneal and LRI incisions via hand-held blade • Manually created capsulorrhexis via bent needle or forceps • Ultrasonic phacoemulsification for lens fragmentation and aspiration Limitations of Manual Cataract Surgery • Limited reproducibility of • incisions • CCC shape • CCC size • Phaco power • can cause corneal burn, corneal endothelial cell loss(1,2) • LRIs 1/23/14 1Pereira 2Park ! et al. JCRS 2006 Oct;32(10):1661-6 et al. Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging. 2010 Mar-Apr;41(2):236-41 !39 Cataract Refractive Outcomes < Half that of LASIK • Astigmatism Correction – Manual LRIs imprecise in shape, size, and depth • Effective Lens Position – Most important factor in achieving expected IOL power – Consistent CCC necessary to bring refractive result within 0.25d – Centered in visual axis and covering optic by 1mm for 360° Hill WE. Does the Capsulorrhexis Affect Refractive Outcomes? In Chang D, editor: In Chang D, editor: Cataract Surgery Today, Bryn Mawr Communications, Wayne, Pennsylvania, 2009. p. 78. ! 1/23/14 Hill WE. Hitting Emmetropia. Chang D. (ed.) In: Mastering Refractive IOLs – the Art and Science. Slack Incorporated, 2008. !40 An Evolving Definition of Cataract Average Age of US Cataract Patient is Declining Today: earlier diagnosis & treatment before substantial vision loss • In 2011, almost 800,000 surgeries will be performed on patients 55-64 years old ! ! • New surgical approaches available to improve UCVA for many patients • Established LASIK market validates that patients will pay for surgically improved vision Goals of Laser Refractive Cataract Surgery Improve Every Procedure • Reduce surgeon variability • Monofocal, Presbyopia, Astigmatism • Refractive Precision and Integration ! ! ! Key Step ! Incision Corneal ! Current Surgery Underutilized Not Optimized Capsulorhexis Variablewith Sized, New laser-based standard, synonymous patient pay Not Centered LRI Lens Fragmentation Imprecise Excessive Ultrasound Power Refractive Impact Safety Impact Astigmatism Infection Variable IOL Position & Effective Lens Power Capsular Tears, Posterior Capsule Opacification Overcorrection, undercorrection, aberrations Delayed visual recovery Perforations Loss of endothelial cells, Capsule Rupture 1/23/14 !42 Image-Guided Femtosecond Laser • Integrated OCT or Scheimpflug scans entire anterior segment; projects images of cornea, lens, iris, capsule onto video microscope • Surgeon selects incisions and lens treatment; patterns are projected onto images and confirmed • Procedure time ~ 1 minute. Projects real-time images as lens is fragmented, capsulotomy is created and then all corneal incisions. Femtosecond Laser Cataract Surgery Primary Incisions • Two and three plane incisions seal very well • 2.4mm wide, 1.6 mm long 3 hours post-op 2.4mm laser incision Arcuate Astigmatic Incisions Precise depth, length, axis 3 hours post-op lri laser incision Highly Reproducible Capsulotomy Laser (n=60) Manual (n=60) !47 RESULTS – REDUCTION IN CDE 16.00 13.83 12.71 12.00 Lower 32% CDE 11.52 Lower 42% 8.00 Lower 50% LenSx Manual 9.35 42% 6.67 6.51 6.41 5.47 4.00 0.00 All Soft Moderate Dense Cataract Grade • • 42% Reduction in CDE All Cataract Grades 32% Reduction in CDE Dense Cataracts !48 Laser Cataract Surgery Conclusions ! • Theoretically the precision of the laser should make cataract outcomes better and safer. • In practice, improvements in safety or vision have NOT been demonstrated. • Despite precision of the laser, there remain many other significant variables in cataract surgery. • It does markedly increase the cost per case and increase length of case. • Patients and industry will likely continue the expansion of its use. • Time will tell if the laser will result in better outcomes or just more expensive surgery. Conclusions • Technological advances: – are changing the way we manage patients – offering patients improved outcomes – driving cost increases in medicine ! !