The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL
Transcription
The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL
Surgeon Presentation Outline • Future of Myopic Refractive Surgery • Phakic IOLs: Evolution & Technology • The Verisyse™ Anterior Chamber, Iris-Fixated Phakic IOL – – – – Product features Clinical data Patient selection, Pre-op Assessment Implantation Future of Myopic Refractive Surgery Myopic Refractive Surgery • Total US Population = 286,158,000 – Myopic • Mild (<-2.00 D) • Moderate (-2.00 to -6.00 D) • High (>-6.00 D) 72,000,000 25% 46,080,000 23,040,000 2,880,000 64% 32% 4% • Surgeons are becoming progressively less willing to attempt LASIK in high myopes (≥12 D) (U.S. Bureau of Census, International Database/Archives of Ophthalmology, March 1983 / Market Scope 2003 / WrongDiagnosis.com / Tay – Study of 412,000 Singapore males.) Refractive Surgery Trends • New technologies will expand the total elective refractive market – high myopia – Phakic IOLs – Pseudoaccommodative IOLs • Refractive surgeries will grow to 2.5 to 3.0 million procedure per year by 2010 • 58% of U.S. surgeons not currently performing phakic IOL implantations plan to do so in the future (2003 Survey of ASCRS) Verisyse™ Phakic IOL • Larger 7 mm effective optical zone (vs. 5.0 mm to 6.0 mm with LASIK) • Diopter range (US): -5.00 to -20.0 D • Additive technology – IOL can be removed – Stable, removable split-haptic/iris fixation • Endothelial cell loss within acceptable range • Opens refractive market to vision correctionminded cataract surgeons Verisyse™ Phakic IOL • Challenges – Requires large incision and suturing – Enclavation process can be technically challenging, learning curve – Risk of infection (lower with fourth-generation fluoroquinolones) Verisyse™ Phakic IOL • Benefit – Tradeoff for greater surgical challenge is fewer functional visual complications and high-quality, high-contrast vision for patients who are not good Custom LASIK candidates Phakic Lenses Evolution & Technology Early Anterior Chamber Lenses 1950’s Strampelli 1953 Dannaheim 1954 Cogan Boberg-Ans 1954 • Significant Complications – Poor fit / heavy – Poor lens quality – Poor surgical technique • Angle-fixated lenses associated with ↑ complications Barraquer 1954 The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL • Verisyse® (Artisan™ in Europe) – Design introduced in 1991 after 5 year trial – Concave- Convex configuration (low profile) • Decreased risk of endothelial damage • Twice the effective power range The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL (-5 TO -20 D) for the Correction of Myopia: Product Features Verisyse™ Features • Perspex CQ-UV PMMA • 8.5 mm overall length Myopic Lenses VRSM5US050 5 mm Optic VRSM6US060 6 mm Optic -3.00 to -23.5 D in 0.50 D steps (in Europe) Verisyse™ Features • Enclavation site – attaches to peripheral iris leaving anterior chamber angles unobstructed – Maintains 1.5 to 2.0 mm distance from corneal endothelium at the angle – Allows wide dilation 1.5 to 2.0 mm 0.95 mm Verisyse™ Features • Split haptic fixation – Attaches to peripheral iris without inhibiting iris function – Less risk of pupil ovalization than with angle-fixated AC phakic IOLs – Avoids issues of PC phakic IOLs (e.g. cataract formation) Verisyse™ Features • Lens is vaulted anteriorly to ensure clearance from anterior lens capsule – Vault range 0.35 to 0.93 mm, dependent on lens power – Occupies ~ 30% of anterior chamber – Lens / endothelium separation 2.03 to 3.25 mm 0.92 mm 0.92 mm Verisyse™ Features • Holds 60% of European market share for phakic IOLs – #1 design worldwide • Resolves high degrees of ametropia while retaining full range of natural accommodation • Design has been in use for >18 years • More than 150,000 phakic procedures have been performed worldwide using the Verisyse™ lens design Clinical Data: The FDA Study Verisyse™ vs LASIK FDA Study: Investigational Sites • • • • • • • • • • Assil – Sinskey Eye Institute Arrowsmith Eye Institute Eye Surgery Center of LA Koch Eye Associates Price Vision Group Hunkeler Eye Center Anis Eye institute LSU Eye Center Stanford University Rothchild Eye Institute • • • • • • • • • • • Emory University UCLA/Maloney Vision Institute John-Kenyon Eye Center Minnesota Eye Consultants Kremer Laser Eye Center Ophthalmology Ltd Manhattan Eye Ear & Throat Bascom Palmer Eye Institute Mackool Eye Institute Moran Eye Center, U of Utah Shiley Eye Institute, UCSD FDA Study • Prospective, nonrandomized study of 662 subjects (mean age 39.6 years) – 493 of which were followed for one year and 231 followed for three years • Correction of axial myopia with lens powers from -5.00 D to -20 D • Mean lens power (n=662): -12.6 D BSCVA 20/40 or Better First Eyes (n=662) Percentage of Eyes 20/40 or Better 100 98.5 99.2 100 99.6 99.6 100 100 100 80 60 40 20 0 s ar Ye 3 s ar Ye 2 ar s Ye th 1 on M 11 s 7th on M 6 s 4th on M 2 1ks ee W 3 2p eo Pr Best Spectacle Corrected Visual Acuity 100 Percentage of Eyes 100 99 80 81 94 94 79 99 99 99 94 100 100 83 90 79 60 60 40 20 0 preop 1 year 2 years 3 years n=662 n=491 n=355 n=228 Time After Surgery 20/20 or better 20/25 or better 20/30 or better 20/40 or better Change in BSCVA at Three Years Percentage of Eyes 6% 49% Snellen Lines Gained/Lost 0.3 % -2 5.9% -1 44.7% 0 38.8% +1 8.4% +2 1.9% >+2 Induced Astigmatism • Incision size: 5.2 to 6.2 mm • Some cylinder reduction by selective incision placement • Refractive cylinder change >2.0 D – 2.4% of first eyes at one year (n=492) – 2.0% of first eyes at two years (n=355) – 3.5% of first eyes at three years (n=226) • FDA safety target: <5% Uncorrected Visual Acuity Percentage of Eyes First Eyes at Three Years 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 92 82 68 50 84 All first eyes (n=231) 71 52 First eyes targeted for emmetropoia and pre-op BCVA 20/20 or better (n=88) 31 20/20 or better 20/25 or better 20/30 or better 20/40 or better Uncorrected Visual Acuity Achieved Correction (D) Predictability Intended vs. Achieved Manifest Spherical Equivalent 6 Months 24.0 23.0 22.0 21.0 20.0 19.0 18.0 17.0 16.0 15.0 14.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.0 8.0 7,0 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 86% + 1.0 D 61% + 0.5 D (with no enhancements) 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Intended Correction (D) 19 20 21 22 23 24 Stability 2.00 0.00 -2.00 -4.00 -6.00 - 0.062 D from 2 yr. to 3 yr. -0.019 D from 6 mos. to 1 yr. -8.00 -10.00 -12.00 -14.00 Time After Surgery yr 3 yr 2 yr 1 m o 6 m o 3 m o 1 k d 1 w 1 Pr eo p -16.00 Visual Symptoms at Night Subjects With At Least 1 Year Follow-up (n=412) Subject Response Subjects with Change in Symptom: p-value Pre-op=No Post-op=Yes Pre-op=Yes Post-op=No Glare (26.4%; 98/371) 51% 49% 0.840 Halo (28.0%; 104/372) 65% 35% 0.002 Starburst (21.5%; 80/372) 55% 45% 0.371 *McNemar Chi-square test Majority of subjects had no change Contrast Sensitivity Mesopic With Glare Contrast Sensitivity n=31* 300 100 30 Preop Postop 10 3.0 p= 0.03 1.5 3 6 12 Cycles per Degree *One eye analysis 18 Patient Satisfaction Percentage of Subjects Subjects With At Least 1 Year Follow-up (n=412) 100 90 80 70 Quality of Vision 60 Satisfaction with Surgery 50 40 Recommend Procedure 30 20 10 0 Favorable Neutral Unfavorable Conclusions • • • • • Excellent uncorrected visual acuity Excellent predictability Good stability Contrast sensitivity unchanged or improved High subjective satisfaction rates Verisyse™ Phakic IOL Implantation Versus LASIK Investigators conducted a prospective, randomized comparison of Verisyse™ Phakic IOL implantation with Excimer LASIK in myopic patients correcting between -9.00 and -19.50 diopters. (El Danasoury MA, et al. Ophthalmology. 2002;109:955-964) • n=61 patients (90 eyes) • mean SE refraction ~ –13.5 D • 29.5% of patients received a Verisyse™ lens in one eye and LASIK in the other eye The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL is sold under the Artisan® name outside the US. One-Year Outcomes Verisyse™ (n=43 eyes) LASIK (n=41 eyes) -0.64 ± 0.8 D -0.87 ± 0.8 D UCVA 20/20 or better, % 20.9 12.2 UCVA 20/40 or better, % 88.4 58.5 2 or more Snellen lines lost on BSCVA, % 0.0 14.6 2 or more Snellen lines gained on BSCVA (n)% 16.3 2.4 Contrast sensitivity ↓2 or more lines (n)% 4.7 14.6 Mean SE Refraction The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL is sold under the Artisan® name outside the US. Author Conclusions • The Verisyse™ Phakic IOL and LASIK were found to be similarly effective, stable and reasonably safe for the correction of moderate to severe myopia. • The lens offered significantly better UCVA and BSCVA, better contrast sensitivity, and a lower enhancement rate. Author Conclusions • Patient preference was significantly in favor of the Verisyse™ Phakic IOL, mainly because of the higher quality vision; 72.2% of patients who received both surgeries preferred the Verisyse™ Phakic IOL. Patient Selection & Preoperative Assessment FDA Indication • The reduction or elimination of myopia in adults with myopia ranging from -5 D to -20 D with less than 2.5 D of astigmatism at the spectacle plane • Patients with documented stability of manifest refraction for the prior 6 months, as demonstrated by a spherical equivalent change of less than 0.50 D The ‘Right’ Patient • Dissatisfied with quality of vision or tired of depending on glasses • Unable to wear contact lenses • Outside the optimal range of laser refractive surgery • Considers risks of natural lens exchange not acceptable • Likes the idea of a reversible procedure that offers high-quality, high-contrast vision The ‘Wrong’ Patient • Age <21 years or with unstable refraction • Anterior chamber depth <3.2 mm • Less than the age-adjusted recommended endothelial cell density • Abnormal iris, such as peaked pupil or elevated iris margin • IOP >21 mm Hg • Pupil width under mesopic conditions >5 mm (5.0 mm optic) • Inappropriate expectations Patient Assessment • Standard intraocular surgical workup and measurement – Lens selection dependent • Precise Refraction • Precise manual keratometry • Accurate Biometry – Anterior Chamber Depth (IOL Master™) – Endothelial Cell Count • Target refraction is emmetropia VERICALC™ 1.1 Program Note: Refraction is automatically corrected for vertex distance & ACD is automatically corrected for lens vault value Verisyse™ Implantation and Post-surgical Protocol Pre-Op Patient Prep • Informed consent – Elective surgery! • Pre-Op Meds – DO NOT DILATE – Antibiotic/Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory – Pilocarpine 1% • Anesthesia – Peri or Retrobulbar for initial eyes – Local when experienced Intraoperative Considerations • Standard implant instrument set + enclavation needle • Scleral or limbal incision recommended – Avoids post-op wound leaks • Cohesive viscoelastic – Easy removal - avoid post-op pressure spikes – Avoid highly viscous brands (i.e. Healon® 5) • < 1.4% sodium hyaluronate – Recommended Healon®, Healon GV® • Incision placement for astigmatism correction when possible – Clear corneal incision with sutures Iridectomy / Iridotomy • Iridectomy/iridotomy is essential • YAG iridectomy can be performed prior to surgery Peripheral Iridectomy Laser Iridectomy Define Landmarks • Anatomical landmarks at enclavation sites – Alternatively, mark longitudinal axis of lens on conjunctiva 6 mm Enclavation Sites 9:00 3:00 5 mm 12:00 Paracentesis 6:00 4:00 • Two (2) incisions at 10:00 & 2:00 8:00 – 0.50 mm • Angle incisions toward enclavation sites Enclavation Sites 10:00 2:00 12:00 Inject Viscoelastic • Use cohesive viscoelastic (Healon®, Healon GV®, etc.) • Always fill from periphery both paracentesis • Do not overfill Incisions • 5 to 6 mm incision • Consider astigmatism Stepped Limbal Clear Corneal Insert Lens • Ensure sufficient miosis • Use implant forceps • Visualize Iris/Pupil Rotate Implant • Inject viscoelastic over lens • Rotate haptic to 3:00 & 9:00 • Center optic on pupil Verisyse™ Instruments Implant Forceps Lens Manipulator, Straight Enclavation Needle Enclavation Pearls 1st Haptic • Maintain chamber – Viscoelastic PRN • Start with your non-dominant hand & enclavate the corresponding haptic first – If ambidextrous, temporal haptic first • Insert enclavation needle in paracentesis first Position Lens Align vertical & longitudinal lens axis with reference marks The Enclavation Process Lens forceps stabilizes & positions lens Enclavation needle pulls iris tissues into haptics The Enclavation Process • After aligning lens, peripheral iris tissue is drawn into the split lens haptics – Stable anchor – minimal tissue trauma – Reversible The Enclavation Process Create small fold of iris tissue & pull into haptic Move needle down & create a larger fold of iris tissue Pull fold of iris & needle through haptic aperture Enclavation Tissue Enclavate tissues from directly below split haptics Enclavation • Draw small amounts of superficial iris tissue into haptic in a circular fashion • Repeat process until lens is securely anchored to the iris Watch Alignment During Enclavation • Lens moving inferiorly – Enclavate tissue directly below superior split haptic to pull lens superiorly Watch Alignment During Enclavation • Lens moving superiorly – Enclavate tissue directly below inferior split haptic to pull lens inferiorly Lens Fixation: Posterior View Post-mortem specimen from 86 year-old with Verisyse™ aphakic IOL in place for 6 years Position Lens 1st Haptic • Position haptic over enclavation site & identify anatomical landmarks or reference marks Enclavation 1st Haptic How Much is Enough? • If you think you have too much iris, you probably don’t! • Take multiple small bites in a clockwise, circular fashion Too Little Too Much Check Alignment • If significant misalignment – Reduce enclavation • Place enclavation needle on top of enclavated iris & push through split haptic • Realign & re-enclavate Position Lens 2nd Haptic • • • • Maintain chamber – Viscoelastic PRN Insert needle through paracentesis Center optic on pupil (vertically) Define landmarks under haptic – Feed slightly peripheral iris to avoid oval pupil Enclavation 2nd Haptic Inspect Lens • • • • Reform chamber Verify centration & pupil Verify adequate enclavation Re-position or re-enclavate if necessary Remove Viscoelastic • Place sutures & tie – Leave one suture untied to facilitate viscoelastic removal • Carefully remove ALL viscoelastic • Tie remaining suture, reform chamber, check for leaks Verisyse Implantation Intraoperative Astigmatism • 1 to 2 diopters – Corneal & limbal incisions • Incision placement & sutures – Scleral incision • LRI or corneal incisions (CI) • 2 or more diopter – Corneal & limbal • Wait for cornea to stabilize – LRI, CI, laser • LRI or corneal incisions Post-Operative Astigmatism • Evaluate patient satisfaction & functionality – Correct astigmatism if patient is complaining or if vision is not functional (drivers license, etc.) • Wait for the cornea to stabilize – LRI, CI, – Laser corneal surgery Post-Surgical Protocol • Standard post-intraocular surgery meds – Antibiotic, steroid, NSAID • Eye shield for 1 week • Return 1 day post-op to check: – IOP – Lens position & pupil – Visual acuity • Routine F/U and visual rehabilitation Fair Balance Intended Use Statement: Verisyse™ Phakic Intraocular Lenses are intended for the reduction or elimination of myopia in adults with myopia ranging from -5 to -20 diopters with less than or equal to 2.5 diopters of astigmatism at the spectacle plane and whose eyes have an anterior chamber depth greater than or equal to 3.2 mm, and for patients with documented stability of manifest refraction for the prior six months as demonstrated by a spherical equivalent change of less than or equal to 0.50 diopter. Rx Only. Precautions: Do not resterilize this lens by any method; do not store the lens at temperatures over 45°C (113°F). Warnings: Surgeons should consider the risk/benefit ratio for adults with preoperative ocular pathology, including but not limited to inflammation, distorted eye and microbial infection. Adverse Events: Adverse events that have been documented as having occurred following lens implantation include, but are not limited to, hyphema, retinal detachment and lens dislocation. For a complete listing of precautions, warnings and adverse events, refer to the package insert.
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