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Five‐year corneal cross‐linking outcomes: A Save Sight Keratoconus Registry Study
- Source :
- Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology. 51:9-18
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2022.
-
Abstract
- We aimed to determine the long-term outcomes of epithelium-off cross-linking (CXL) in keratoconus patients.An observational registry study from 41 centres across 5 countries was carried out. Primary outcomes included the mean change in visual acuity (VA), Kmax, K2, and thinnest corneal thickness (TCT) at 1-5 years. Secondary outcomes included the percentage of eyes with worsening, stable and improving outcomes.There were 976 eyes of 794 patients with 1-year of complete follow-up, 501 eyes with 2-years, 355 with 3-years, 235 with 4-years and 162 with 5-years. There was a significant improvement in mean VA from baseline by 3.7 logMAR letters (p 0.001) in year 1, and 6.9 (p 0.001) in year 5. Mean Kmax decreased by 1.2 dioptres (D; p 0.01) in year 1. During subsequent years the Kmax flattening appeared sustained but this was not statistically significant. K2 flattened significantly from baseline in year 1 and then remained stable. At 1 year, 4.1% patients were poor responders to CXL in terms of VA, losing ≥15 letters. The proportion of the poor responders remained unchanged: 4.9% at 5-years. The proportion of poor responders in terms of Kmax remained similar: 5.9% steepening by ≥2D at 1-year and 7.5% at 5-years. The proportion of K2 poor responders remained stable with 4.7% steepening by ≥2D at 1-year and 5.8% at 5-years.Cross-linking is effective at stabilising keratoconus up to 5 years in most patients. However, a small proportion of eyes failed to stabilise and had reduced vision.
- Subjects :
- Ophthalmology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14429071 and 14426404
- Volume :
- 51
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....56fe11e4b9fc751bef926a3067f52235
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1111/ceo.14177