Purpose: This study evaluates the efficacy, predictability and safety of LASIK surgery as a treatment for myopia performed as part of a large-scale, prospective clinical audit spanning 10 years in an Asian study population and to evaluate the outcomes and trends.
Design: Prospective, nonrandomized, single-center, multisurgeon study.
Participants: We included 37,932 eyes of 19,753 patients that underwent myopic LASIK at the Singapore National Eye Centre between 1998 and 2007.
Methods: All eyes underwent LASIK as a treatment for myopia. Pre- and postoperative refractions, uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA), and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) were documented.
Main outcomes measures: Safety, efficacy, refractive predictability, treatment trends, retreatment rates, and complications for mild, moderate, and high myopia according to spherical equivalence (SE) of less than -5.00 diopters (D), -5.00 D or more to less than -10.0 D, and -10.00 D or more, respectively.
Results: Patients' median age was 32 years (mean, 33.0+/-7.9 years); there were 6832 males (34.6%) and 12,921 females included. Patients were predominantly ethnic Chinese (90.5%). Mean follow-up time was 68.8 days. The mean spherical error corrected was -5.90+/-2.57 D (median, -5.625 D), and outcomes were categorized into low, moderate, or high myopia. The UCVA achieving > or =20/40 has been consistently above 90% since 2000, with 72.8% achieving > or =20/20. More than 93.0% of eyes achieved within +/-1.00 D target in the last 4 years. An improvement in safety was observed since the start of the study, with the best outcomes observed in 2007; loss of 1 and 2 Snellen line BCVA postoperatively was 2.4% and 0.1%, respectively. The overall retreatment rate was 3.8%; 91% of retreated eyes achieved UCVA of > or =20/30. Between 1998 and 2007, there was a significant improvement in postoperative UCVA and BCVA (P<0.001).
Conclusions: Myopic LASIK performed in Asian eyes within a comprehensive LASIK clinical program with appropriate clinical audit governance can be safe and effective, with high refractive predictability. Improvements in the nomograms to prevent undercorrection and to compensate for myopic regression have led to better efficacy after LASIK, with an increasing percentage of patients achieving 20/15 visual acuity postoperatively.
Copyright 2010 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.