Eye and Vision | 2021

Long term results of accelerated 9\u2009mW corneal crosslinking for early progressive keratoconus: the Siena Eye-Cross Study 2

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


To assess clinical results of the 9\u2009mW/5.4\u2009J/cm2 accelerated crosslinking (ACXL) in the treatment of progressive keratoconus (KC) over a span of 5\u2009years. The prospective open non-randomized interventional study (Siena Eye-Cross Study 2) included 156 eyes of 112 patients with early progressive KC undergoing the Epi-Off 9\u2009mW/5.4\u2009J/cm2 ACXL at the Siena Crosslinking Centre, Italy. The mean age was 18.05\u2009±\u20095.6\u2009years. The 20-min treatments were performed using the New KXL I (Avedro, Waltham, USA), 10\u2009min of 0.1% HPMC Riboflavin soaking (VibeX Rapid, Avedro, Waltham, USA) and 10\u2009min of continuous-light UV-A irradiation. Uncorrected distance visual acuity (UDVA), corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA), Kmax, coma, minimum corneal thickness (MCT), surface asymmetry index (SAI), endothelial cell count (ECC) were measured, and corneal OCT performed. UDVA and CDVA improved significantly at the 3rd (P =\u20090.028), Δ\u2009+\u20090.17 Snellen lines and 6th postoperative month, respectively (P < 0.001), Δ\u2009+\u20090.23 Snellen lines. Kmax improved at the 6th postoperative month (P =\u20090.03), Δ\u2009−\u20091.49 diopters from the baseline value. Also, coma aberration value improved significantly (P =\u20090.004). A mild temporary haze was recorded in 14.77% of patients without affecting visual acuity and without persistent complications. Corneal OCT revealed a mean demarcation line depth at 332.6\u2009±\u200933.6\u2009μm. The 5-year results of Epi-Off 9\u2009mW/5.4\u2009J/cm2 ACXL demonstrated statistically significant improvements in UCVA and CDVA, corneal curvature and corneal higher-order aberrations which confers a long-term stability for progressive ectasia. Based on the results of the Siena Eye-Cross Study 2, the 9\u2009mW/5.4\u2009J/cm2 ACXL is a candidate to be the natural evolution of Epi-Off CXL treatment for the management of early progressive corneal ectasia, and thus optimize clinic workflow.

Volume 8
Pages None
DOI 10.1186/s40662-021-00240-8
Language English
Journal Eye and Vision

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