Clinical Optometry (Jul 2024)

Relationships Between Success Factors in Daily Disposable Multifocal Contact Lenses

  • Guthrie SE,
  • Luensmann D,
  • Woods J,
  • Vega J,
  • Orsborn G

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 16
pp. 157 – 167

Abstract

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Sarah E Guthrie,1 Doerte Luensmann,1 Jill Woods,1 Jose Vega,2 Gary Orsborn2 1Centre for Ocular Research & Education (CORE), School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada; 2CooperVision Incorporated, San Ramon, CA, USACorrespondence: Sarah E Guthrie, Email [email protected]: To explore links between subjective comfort and vision in habitual multifocal soft contact lens (MFCL) wearers when refit with daily disposable MFCLs, to determine which factors are relevant for success with MFCLs and evaluate consistency between MFCLs of different designs.Patients and Methods: This work examined subjective measures in a randomised, participant masked, bilateral wear crossover study at five optometry practices. Fifty-eight habitual MFCL wearers wore stenfilcon A multifocal (stenA-MF; CooperVision Inc) and delefilcon A multifocal (delA-MF; Alcon) for two-weeks. Subjective ratings included satisfaction with comfort and vision and agreement questions.Results: Agreement with “I would like to wear this MFCL in the future” was taken to indicate success with each MFCL; agreement was significantly higher with stenA-MF. There was strong correlation between agreement responses for “I would like to wear this MFCL in the future” and “MFCL met my needs for vision” with both lenses (p< 0.01). However, it was only with stenA-MF, which had higher agreement responses to both statements (p< 0.05), that responses to these two statements correlated with satisfaction with end-of-day (EOD) comfort (p< 0.01). These differences in correlations between the two lenses are seemingly driven by greater satisfaction with stenA-MF for near and intermediate vision (p< 0.05).Conclusion: Subjective vision and comfort were only correlated when vision met the needs of most participants. Meeting participants’ needs for vision correlated strongly with wanting to wear a MFCL. Results indicate that meeting vision needs is more important than meeting comfort needs when influencing whether presbyopic patients continue wearing MFCLs.Keywords: comfort, vision, presbyopia, soft contact lens, correlation

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