The purpose of this study is to validate the safety and effectiveness of treating myopia (short-sightedness) higher than -10D using small incision lenticule extraction (SMILE) with the VisuMax femtosecond laser.
Laser refractive surgery (LASIK and PRK) has been established for 25 years to treat myopia (short-sightedness). Over this time, the technology has been significantly improved to enable safe treatment of myopia up to -15D. Improvements including changing the shape of the lens of corneal tissue removed to better match the natural shape, and increasing the diameter of the applied correction to cover larger pupil sizes, have greatly reduced side-effects such as night vision glare and halos. Similarly, safety has been improved by using a laser (femtosecond laser) to create the corneal flap rather than a blade (known as a microkeratome), meaning that the cornea is reliably left with more than the safe amount of tissue. In 2006, a new method of laser refractive surgery was introduced, small incision lenticule extraction (SMILE), which provides a minimally invasive keyhole method as it avoids the need to create a flap. In SMILE, a single laser (femtosecond laser) is used to make two curved cuts inside the cornea (without breaching the outside) that separate the lens of tissue that needs removing to focus the vision. This lens of tissue is removed in once piece (rather than evaporated as in LASIK) through a small 2mm wide tunnel to the surface. SMILE has been used to treat short-sightedness up to -10D for more than 200,000 procedures worldwide and has been shown to achieve similar results to LASIK. However, because no flap is needed, this upper part of the cornea can also contribute strength, meaning that the cornea is stronger after SMILE than after LASIK. It is also expected that the accuracy for higher corrections using SMILE would be better than LASIK because the potential inaccuracies associated with excimer lasers (used in LASIK) are eliminated. This study will investigate the results of SMILE for myopia above -10D.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
114
The VisuMax femtosecond laser is used to create two interfaces that define a refractive lenticule of stromal tissue and a 2mm wide tunnel to connect the upper layer to the corneal surface. The lenticule is manually dissected and removed through the small 2mm incision without the need to create a flap as in LASIK.
Tobramycin and dexamethasone (Tobradex) eye drops will be used four times a day for 1 week after the procedure
Ofloxacin (Exocin) eye drops will be used four times a day for 1 week after the procedure
London Vision Clinic
London, United Kingdom
Variability of the Refractive Predicatibility
Calculate the standard deviation of the postoperative spherical equivalent, adjusted relative to the intended target, after the SMILE procedure. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit. An accurate outcome is where the postoperative spherical equivalent is equal to the intended target spherical equivalent. A mean difference less than zero implies the outcome was undercorrected, whereas a mean difference greater than zero implies the outcomes was overcorrected. A smaller standard deviation represents a more accurate and more predictable outcome.
Time frame: 1 year postop
Efficacy of Uncorrected Distance Visual Acuity
Measure the uncorrected distance visual acuity achieved after the SMILE procedure relative to the preoperative CDVA for all eyes where the intended target refraction was emmetropia. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit.
Time frame: 1 year postop
Safety of Corrected Distance Visual Acuity (Change in Corrected Distance Visual Acuity)
Assess the change in corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) before and after the SMILE procedure. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit.
Time frame: 1 year postop
Predictability of Refractive Correction
Measure the postoperative refraction and calculate the deviation from the intended target in terms of spherical equivalent. Mean, standard deviation and range will be calculated. The data will also be analyzed as a scatter plot by plotting the attempted vs achieved spherical equivalent refraction. The data will also be graphically displayed as a histogram. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit.
Time frame: 1 year postop
Predictability of Refractive Astigmatism Correction
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Proxymetacaine 0.5% eye drops will be used as an anaesthetic during the procedure
Oxybuprocaine 0.4% eye drops will be used as an anaesthetic during the procedure
Measure the postoperative refractive astigmatism and calculate the deviation from the intended target. Mean, standard deviation and range will be calculated. The data will also be analyzed as a scatter plot by plotting the target induced astigmatism vs the surgically induced astigmatism. The data will also be graphically displayed as a histogram. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit.
Time frame: 1 year postop
Stability of the Spherical Equivalent Refraction
Measure the postoperative refraction at 3 months and 12 months after the SMILE procedure and calculate the mean and standard deviation of spherical equivalent refraction for each time point.
Time frame: 3 months and 1 year postop
Change in Night Vision Disturbances (Questionnaire)
Provide the patient with a questionnaire to subjectively grade their quality of vision at night to assess whether this has changed after the SMILE procedure. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit. A Rasch scale of 0-100 was used. A score of 0 indicates no quality of vision disturbances. A score of 100 indicates severe quality of vision disturbances. The outcome is calculated as the difference between the Rasch score before and after surgery, reported as the change in Rasch score units.
Time frame: 1 year postop
Change in Corneal Higher Order Aberrations
Measure the corneal aberrations before and after the SMILE procedure using the Atlas topographer to evaluate the change in corneal aberrations due to the surgery. Analysis performed on the data from the 1 year postoperative visit.
Time frame: 1 year postop