Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2023)

Ten-year follow-up of corneal cross-linking and refractive surface ablation in patients with asymmetric corneal topography

  • Bernardo Kaplan Moscovici,
  • Pablo Felipe Rodrigues,
  • Marcos Paulo Suehiro Dantas,
  • Juliana Taemy Okimoto,
  • Obidulho Sakassegawa Naves,
  • Felipe Marques de Carvalho Taguchi,
  • João Baptista Nigro Santiago Malta,
  • Mauro Campos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/IJO.IJO_2557_22
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 71, no. 9
pp. 3210 – 3218

Abstract

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Purpose: Compare the safety and efficacy of wavefront-guided photorefractive keratotomy (PRK) 6 months after cross-linking (CXL) to wavefront-guided PRK alone for refractive correction in patients with bilateral asymmetric corneal topography. Methods: Prospective randomized clinical trial with 16 patients (32 eyes). CXL with subsequent PRK after 6 months in one eye, and PRK alone was performed in contralateral eyes. The follow-up was 10 years. We analyzed visual outcomes, Scheimpflug topography, and corneal haze evaluation. Results: Eyes in the PRK group showed better results than in the CXL + PRK group. Mean postoperative CDVA was 0.044 logmar (SD, 0.073) in the PRK group and 0.1 logmar (SD, 0.21) in the CXL + PRK group, the mean sphere was + 0.21 (SD, 0.6) D in the PRK group and 0.87 (SD, 2.3) D in the CXL + PRK group, and mean SE was −0.35 (SD, 0.65) D in the PRK group and 0.62 (SD, 2.32) D in the CXL + PRK group. In one patient, a steepening of 2.5 D and a thinning of 17 μm occurred in PRK alone group. Two patients in the CXL + PRK group presented corneal haze. The overall complication rate was 18,75% (haze and ectasia). Conclusion: Non-simultaneous CXL and PRK procedures yielded good refractive results, but worse than those obtained with PRK alone. Although one patient in the PRK group developed corneal ectasia, the CXL + PRK group had a higher loss of vision lines, indicating less safety.

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