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Bilateral Refractive Lens Exchange With Trifocal Intraocular Lens for Hyperopia in Patients Younger Than 40 Years: A Case–Control Study

Mohammad Reza Djodeyre, Julio Ortega‐Usobiaga, Jaime Beltrán, Vasyl Druchkiv, Julio Baviera-Sabater, Carmen Bouza-Miguens

2021Journal of Refractive Surgery20 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate visual outcomes, satisfaction, and spectacle independence in non-presbyopic hyperopic patients who underwent bilateral refractive lens exchange with a trifocal intraocular lens (IOL) and to compare them with presbyopic hyperopic patients. METHODS: In this retrospective study, patients younger than 40 years underwent bilateral refractive lens exchange with a diffractive trifocal IOL (FineVision Micro F; PhysIOL SA) for hyperopia with at least 3 months of follow-up. A control group of patients older than 50 years was matched by axial length, sex, and follow-up. Safety, efficacy, predictability, patient satisfaction, and spectacle independence were evaluated. RESULTS: One hundred thirty-three patients (average age = 36.94 ± 2.91 years; range = 21.50 to 40 years) were included in this study. After a mean follow-up of 8.83 ± 5.69 months (range = 2.75 to 77.63 months), the safety and efficacy indexes and predictability within ±1.00 diopters (D) were 1.02%, 0.98%, and 99.62%, respectively, which was not different from the control group ( P > .05). No intraoperative complications were recorded. The only postoperative complication was posterior capsule opacification in 21 eyes (7.89%), which was similar to the control group ( P > .05). Ninety-seven percent of patients in each group expressed that they were satisfied and all of them in each group reported that they did not use spectacles for distance, intermediate, or near vision. CONCLUSIONS: Refractive lens exchange and trifocal IOL implantation for hyperopia in patients without presbyopia provided the same good visual outcomes as in presbyopic patients with a high rate of patient satisfaction and spectacle independence. [ J Refract Surg . 2021;37(8):524–531.]

Topics & Concepts

DioptreMedicineOphthalmologyIntraocular lensPresbyopiaPatient satisfactionRefractive errorRetrospective cohort studyOptometryEye diseaseSurgeryVisual acuityOphthalmology and Visual Impairment StudiesGlaucoma and retinal disordersCorneal surgery and disorders
Bilateral Refractive Lens Exchange With Trifocal Intraocular Lens for Hyperopia in Patients Younger Than 40 Years: A Case–Control Study | Litcius