AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated long-term effects of corneal collagen crosslinking (CXL) on 131 patients with progressive keratoconus from 2006 to 2016, focusing on visual acuity and corneal measurements over time.
  • Results showed that while corrected visual acuity improved, the effectiveness of CXL diminished after 5 years, with an increase in non-responders, particularly among patients with certain risk factors like young age and high astigmatism.
  • The researchers concluded that CXL is effective in slowing keratoconus progression and suggested that patients displaying risk factors may need re-treatment after several years.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate long-term outcomes of corneal collagen crosslinking (CXL) using riboflavin and UV-A irradiation and to determine when to repeat CXL.

Methods: In this retrospective consecutive interventional case series 131 eyes of 131 patients (95 male, 36 female, mean age 29.7 ± 11.4 years) between 2006 and 2016 received standard CXL (Dresden protocol, epithelium-off) for progressive keratoconus. Corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) and corneal tomography (K, K, ) were repeatedly recorded 1 year ( = 103 eyes) to 10 years ( = 44) postoperatively. Only one eye per patient was included. Paired -test or Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank test was used for parametric and nonparametric data, respectively.

Results: 1-3 years preoperatively, median K significantly increased by 1.1 D ( < 0.001). Postoperatively, median K increased by 0.1 D after 1 year, then decreased over the remaining postoperative period by 0.85 D ( = 0.021). fluctuated without significant change. Median apical corneal thickness decreased by 16 µm ( = 0.012) after 5 years and then returned to preoperative values. Mean CDVA showed a significant improvement (decrease in logMAR 0.08 after 10 years,  = 0.010). CXL non-responders, defined by a postoperative increase in >2 D, increased from 16% after 5 to 33% after 10 years. Risk factors for non-response were young age, high astigmatism (>4.3 D), thin cornea (<480 µm), poor initial visual acuity (CDVA ≥0.3 D), and atopic dermatitis. 4 eyes were re-treated 3-4 years after first CXL without complications and keratoconus stabilized thereafter.

Conclusions: CXL can slow or stop keratoconus progression. However, as the number of responders declines after 5 years, especially patients with risk factors may require re-treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02713683.2022.2117383DOI Listing

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