Abstract

BackgroundTo evaluate the safety and efficacy of a new toric intraocular lens (IOL) with anchor-wing haptics.MethodsThe new toric IOL with anchor-wing haptics (NS60YT, NIDEK Co., Ltd.) was implanted in eligible patients with age-related cataracts with preoperative corneal astigmatism of 1.0 D or greater at a university hospital and two private hospitals in Japan. The following IOL cylinder powers were evaluated: 1.50 D (NS60YT3), 2.25 D (NS60YT4), 3.00 D (NS60YT5) and 4.50 D (NS60YT7). All patients were assessed out to 12 months postoperatively. The primary endpoint was visual acuity (VA) with spherical addition at 6 months postoperatively, and the primary analysis calculated the proportion of eyes with VA with spherical addition of 0.1 logMAR or better. The magnitude of rotation was compared to the intended axis of IOL implantation at each postoperative examination. Adverse events were evaluated for the safety analysis.ResultsThis study enrolled 64 eyes of 53 patients. At 6 months postoperatively, for all IOL powers, VA with spherical addition of 0.1 logMAR or better was achieved in 90% [95% confidence interval (CI): 80–96] of eyes. The mean IOL rotation was 5.3 ± 4.3° at 12 months postoperatively. The mean magnitude of rotation ranged from 1.9° to 2.5° between each postoperative examination from 1 day to 12 months. There were no vision-threatening intraoperative or postoperative complications for the duration of the study.ConclusionsThe NS60YT IOL remained stable after implantation and was efficacious for treating 1.00 D or greater astigmatism in patients with senile cataracts.Trial registrationThis study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03242486) on August 8, 2017 - Retrospectively registered.

Highlights

  • To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a new toric intraocular lens (IOL) with anchor-wing haptics

  • Two eyes of one patient were excluded from all analyses due to non-compliance with Good Clinical Practice for Medical Devices (GCP) because the consent forms were misplaced

  • One patient died after 6 months examination due to reasons unrelated to cataract surgery

Read more

Summary

Introduction

To evaluate the safety and efficacy of a new toric intraocular lens (IOL) with anchor-wing haptics. There are a variety of methods currently used for treating cataracts with co-existing corneal astigmatism, including but not limited to, implantation of supplementary sulcus-fixated IOLs, implantation of pinhole IOLs, laser refractive surgery for a corneal “touch-up”, or toric IOL. The Aktis toric (Model NS60YT; Nidek Co., Ltd.) is a newly developed IOL that is based on the existing monofocal Nex-Acri® AA 1P IOL platform (Nidek Co., Ltd.). Rotational stability for this IOL is maintained by anchor-wing haptics. Multicenter study, we present the stability and clinical outcomes of NS60YT implantation for the correction of moderate to high astigmatism

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call