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Journal ArticleDOI

Biometric refractive error after cataract and retina surgery: a systematic review and a benchmark proposal.

TLDR
In this paper, the authors systematically review studies on refractive error after phacovitrectomy and phacoemulsification and investigate factors associated with larger error, and provide estimates of fixed and random error for postoperative vs. target spherical equivalent.
Abstract
Purpose To systematically review studies on refractive error after phacovitrectomy and phacoemulsification and to investigate factors associated with larger error. Materials and methods A literature search was performed using PUBMED and EMBASE until May 2020. The articles were included in the study if they reported data about refractive error as the difference in spherical equivalent between actual vs. target refraction in patients who underwent phacovitrectomy and phacoemulsification according to the type of biometry (ultrasound or optical). An inverse variance meta-analysis technique was used to pool errors; standard deviations (SDs), which are an expression of random error, were reported descriptively as median and range of the 95% coefficient of reproducibility (95% CR: 1.96 SD). Results Twenty-one studies (197,353 eyes) were included. The mean error obtained using optical biometry was negligible for phacoemulsification (0.04 D, 95% CI: -0.04 to 0.12; 8 studies, 587 eyes) and was consistent with larger datasets using mixed biometric methods (0.02, 95% CI -0.07 to 0.04; 5 studies, 194,522 eyes). A trend towards hyperopia was found with ultrasound biometry after phacoemulsification (+0.21 D, 0.00-0.42 D; 7 studies, 394 eyes). Mean error after phacovitrectomy was clinically insignificant with optical biometry (-0.10 D, -0.22 to 0.02;, 8 studies, 453 eyes), and) and a mild myopic shift was possible with ultrasound biometry (-0.39 D, 95% CI: -0.68 to -0.09 D; 6 studies, 529 eyes). The 95% CR was greater and more variable with ultrasound biometry in patients who underwent phacovitrectomy (median 1.75 D, range 0.47-2.5) while it was consistent and lower with optical biometry in patients who underwent phacoemulsification (median 0.96 D, range 0.60-1.2]). Conclusions Phacovitrectomy causes a mild myopic shift compared to phacoemulsification, which is clinically relevant only with ultrasound biometry. Furthermore, our review provides estimates of fixed and random error for postoperative vs. target spherical equivalent as a continuous variable, that is easy to use as benchmark for quality assurance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

End-to-end residual attention mechanism for cataractous retinal image dehazing

TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed an end-to-end residual attention mechanism (ERAN) for cataractous retinal image dehazing, which includes four modules: encoding module, multi-scale feature extraction module, feature fusion module, and decoding module.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pars plana vitrectomy combined with phacoemulsification versus pars plana vitrectomy only for treatment of phakic rhegmatogenous retinal detachment: a systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: Slightly better visual and refractive results were observed in the PPV-only group, and there was no significant difference between the two groups regarding the anatomical outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Retrospective diagnosis of naked eye visual acuity (UCVA) variations in patients with refractive errors treated with SMILE, LASIK, and WF-LASIK refractive surgery.

TL;DR: In this paper, a retrospective assessment of the visual acuity (UCVA) variations in bare eyes of the refractive error cases treated with SMILE, LASIK and WF-LASIK was performed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Refractive error after combined phaco-vitrectomy: A multicentric study

TL;DR: In this article , the post-operative refractive error of patients undergoing combined phaco-vitrectomy and intraocular lens (IOL)-power formula had the best refractive outcomes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Partial coherence interferometry: a novel approach to biometry in cataract surgery

TL;DR: In this article, a prospective study of 85 cataract eyes to improve refractive outcome of catarach surgery due to a more accurate calculation of intraocular lens power was performed by using the SRK II formula using ultrasound biometry data.
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Accuracy of Intraocular Lens Calculation Formulas

TL;DR: The Barrett Universal II formula had the lowest prediction error for the 2 IOL models studied and application of the WK axial length modification generally resulted in a shift from hyperopic to myopic outcomes in long eyes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biometry and intraocular lens power calculation

TL;DR: The article reviews recent studies and advances in the field of biometry and intraocular lens power calculations and finds several noncontact optical-based devices compare favorably, if not superiorly, to older ultrasonic biometric and keratometric techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sample Size for Assessing Agreement between Two Methods of Measurement by Bland-Altman Method.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new method of sample size estimation for Bland-Altman agreement assessment, which is based on the width of the confidence interval for LOAs (limits of agreement) in comparison to predefined clinical agreement limit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for refractive error after cataract surgery: analysis of 282 811 cataract extractions reported to the European Registry of Quality Outcomes for cataract and refractive surgery

TL;DR: Poor preoperative CDVA, target refraction, coexisting eye diseases, surgical difficulties including previous ophthalmic interventions, and surgical complications were in varying degrees related to a postoperative refractive error after standard cataract surgery.
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