Abstract
We systematically reviewed the literature to investigate when refraction is stable following routine cataract surgery implanting monofocal intraocular lenses. Current advice recommends obtaining new spectacles 4-6weeks following surgery. Due to advancements in surgical techniques, we hypothesised that refractive stability would be achieved earlier, which could have major short-term improvements in quality of life for patients. Medline, CINAHL, AMED, Embase, Web of Science and the Cochrane Library were searched with key words chosen to find articles, which assessed refraction following uncomplicated cataract surgery. Citation chains and the reference lists of all included papers were searched. Unpublished literature was identified using OpenGrey (www.opengrey.eu). The review considered studies that measured refraction at regular intervals following surgery until stability was achieved. The search identified 6,680 papers. Two reviewers independently screened the abstracts and nine papers were found to fit the criteria, of which five were included in the meta-analysis. The quality of the papers was evaluated using the Methodological Index for Non-Randomised Studies (MINORS) instrument. Meta-analysis of 301 patients' data of spherical, cylindrical and spherical equivalent correction were performed using Review Manager 5 (RevMan 5.3) (https://revman.cochrane.org/). Refraction at 1-week versus the gold standard of 4-weeks showed no significant difference for sphere data (effect size and 95% confidence interval of; ES=0.00, 95% CI: -0.17, 0.17; p=1.00), cylindrical data (ES=+0.06; 95% CI: -0.05, 0.17; p=0.31), and spherical equivalent (ES=-0.01; 95% CI: -0.12, 0.10; p=0.90). Heterogeneity was non-significant (I2 <25%) for all refractive elements. Data were similar for 2- versus 4-weeks post-surgery. Acquired data from one study highlighted a small number of patients with very unstable cylindrical corrections at 1-week post-operatively. No statistical difference was found when comparing sphere, cylindrical and spherical equivalent values at 1- and 4-weeks post cataract surgery. This suggests that new glasses could be provided 1-week after surgery. However, from a clinical perspective, a small number of patients (~7%) from an acquired dataset (N=72) showed very unstable cylindrical corrections at 1-week. Further work is needed to determine why this is the case and how these patients can be detected.
Highlights
Cataract surgery is the most common surgery performed in the UK, with approximately 400 000 surgeries per year; between 2015–2035 this is anticipated to increase by 50%
Current guidance from the UK Royal College of Ophthalmologists states that new glasses should only be provided 4– 6 weeks after surgery.[2]
Three studies gave no details of how refraction was measured.[26,29,30]
Summary
Cataract surgery is the most common surgery performed in the UK, with approximately 400 000 surgeries per year; between 2015–2035 this is anticipated to increase by 50%.1 Current guidance from the UK Royal College of Ophthalmologists states that new glasses should only be provided 4– 6 weeks after surgery.[2]. Current guidance from the UK Royal College of Ophthalmologists states that new glasses should only be provided 4– 6 weeks after surgery.[2] there have been great advancements in the surgical procedure of cataract surgery, aftercare guidelines regarding when refraction is stable have not been updated to reflect this. Oshika and Tsuboi assessed the timings of astigmatic and refractive stabilisation following six different surgery procedures.[3] They showed that while 11 mm and 6.5 mm incision sizes did not stabilise for more than 3 months, the 3.2 mm incision group stabilised at 2weeks post-surgery. With further advancements since this study was published in 1995, incisions are between 1.8– 2.75 mm,[4] and it has been demonstrated that smaller incisions lead to faster refractive stabilisation.[5,6]
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