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In an aging population, cataract and presbyopia become increasingly common. A cataract develops when the natural crystalline lens inside a person's eye, becomes cloudy over time, causing reduction of vision. Presbyopia is an age related condition resulting in loss of reading/near vision and requiring reading glasses.
Cataract surgery is the most common elective surgery in the world for patients over 65. It is composed of removal the cataract and insertion of a new intraocular lens (IOL). Currently only monofocal IOLs are available on the NHS (National Health Service, United Kingdom) - meaning they give good distance or near vision. The majority of patients opt for good distance vision with glasses to read.
The investigators are trialling insertion of a new Extended Depth of Focus (enhanced aspheric) IOL (EDoF IOL), which treats both cataract and presbyopia. All patients attending St Thomas' hospital for treatment of cataracts will be considered for invitation to the study.
Patients who participate in the study will be randomly selected to receive either the new Extended Depth of Focus IOL - the TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 IOL, or a well-established monofocal (non-EDoF) IOL the Alcon Acrysof IQ SN60WF IOL during cataract surgery. Insertion of the Alcon Acrysof IQ SN60WF IOL is known to treat cataract but not presbyopia.
Patients will be assessed and have their surgery performed at St Thomas' Hospital London. They will have 7 appointments over 12 months, plus surgery. The investigators hope to demonstrate better distance, intermediate and near vision and increased spectacle independence in the TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 IOL group.
EDoF IOLs have the potential to improve cataract surgery outcomes for patients in the NHS.
Full description
This study is a clinical trial, designed to compare visual outcomes after cataract surgery with two different intraocular lenses. As previously described, modern day cataract surgery is composed of two main components: removal of the cataract, and insertion of an intraocular lens (IOL). The role of the intraocular lens is to replace the focusing power of the natural crystalline lens inside the eye. It is this lens that becomes a cataract. Removing a cataract alone helps light enter the eye, but does not focus it well. Prior to the invention of intraocular lenses, patients required extremely thick and strong glasses for both distance and near vision.
Currently only monofocal intraocular lenses are available on the NHS. Different strengths of lens can be chosen to give the patient good distance, intermediate or near vision. That means the ability to focus on objects in the distance, middle distance or near. Most patients opt for good distance vision, enabling them to mobilise easily, watch TV and drive, and require glasses for reading.
As described above, most patients over the age of 50, have some element of presbyopia, which is the inability to focus on near objects, resulting in the need for reading glasses. Inserting extended depth of focus (EDoF IOLs) intraocular lenses during cataract surgery, can help improve their reading vision without reading glasses.
The TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 IOL is a new EDoF IOL which has an enhanced depth of focus through its novel 'enhanced aspheric' design. This will help treat presbyopia. The Alcon Acrysof IQ SN60WF IOL is an established IOL which gives good monofocal vision, i.e. good distance or near vision, but not both.
Our trial will investigate the effect of a new Extended depth of focus lens on vision and compare it to a commonly used Monofocal IOL. The investigators will recruit patients who have bilateral cataracts. These patients will have otherwise healthy eyes. Patients who have been referred to St Thomas' Hospital for assessment for cataracts will be considered for the trial. If they fulfil the criteria for acceptance to the trial, the consulting doctor will discuss this with the patient. If the patient expresses interest, they will be referred to the Research department. The cataract research fellow will review them and consider them for admission to the trial. This review will happen on the day of the original appointment, or the patient will be given an another appointment time and date for further assessment. If a patient would like further information about the study, but cannot speak to the Cataract Research Fellow that same day, they will be asked to fill in a Consent to Contact form, which will allow the research department to contact the patient for consideration for entry to the study.
The investigators will recruit 2 groups of patients, with 70 patients in each group. The investigators will randomly assign them to either the TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 group or the Alcon Acrysof IQ SN60WF IOL group. Patients will not be informed of which group they are in, until completion of the study. This 'masking' is to help reduce bias in the post-operative testing. Although the Doctors in the research dept will know which group the patient is in, by not giving this information to the patient, the investigators aim to get a more accurate assessment of their satisfaction with their vision.
All patients will have cataract surgery on one eye, an appointment to review their post-operative outcome, and then the second cataract operation. The patients in the TECNIS Eyhance group will have TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 lenses inserted into both eyes. The patients in the Alcon group will have Alcon Acrysof IQ SN60WF lenses inserted into both eyes. Patients who fulfil the inclusion/exclusion criteria will be fully informed of the investigative nature of the study and consented. The TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 IOL is not used in the NHS, but is used in private practice in the UK. The Alcon SN60WF IOL is commonly used in the NHS.
Once patients are consented, they will have a standard pre-operative assessment which will include taking a medical and ophthalmic history, a full eye examination, refraction (similar to an assessment with an optician), have their vision tested at distance with and without glasses, and an intraocular pressure check (tonometry). The investigators will perform a biometry (measurement of the eye) to calculate the lens power required for surgery. Intraocular lenses are available in different powers, in the same way spectacle lenses are available in different powers. The investigators will also document the type of glasses a patient uses. The investigators will also perform a Macula OCT scan - a non invasive scan of the macula, which is the central part of the retina. The investigators will also perform an endothelial cell count, which is an non-invasive scan of the inner layer fo the cornea.
Cataract surgery will be performed during NHS cataract lists at St Thomas' Hospital. Surgery will be performed by senior cataract surgeons, and standard protocols will be followed. The investigators will endevour to reduce astigmatism using on-axis incisions and opposite clear corneal incisions (OCCIs). These are standard cataract surgery techniques.
The investigators will be using a strategy called micro-monovision. Most people have a dominant eye, in the same way that they have a dominant hand. In micro-monovision the investigators choose an intraocular lens power that will give the dominant eye good distance vision (emmetropia), and a intraocular lens power that will give the non-dominant eye good intermediate distance vision. The investigators will be using this strategy in both the TECNIS Eyhance ICB00 group and the Alcon IQ SN60WF group.
Post-operatively patients will be processed in the usual manner based on the protocol developed for cataract surgery at our institution (Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK) and will undergo an out-patient appointment 2 weeks.
During this appointment the investigators will assess the patient's vision (unaided, with glasses and with pinhole), intraocular pressure (tonometry), refraction (with an autorefraction machine), perform a full eye examination, included dilation of the pupils and fundoscopy. The investigators will also perform a macula OCT scan.
As well as the standard and pre- and post operative assessments, patients will have the following additional Appointments and investigations
Patients will be asked to return at 6 weeks and 6 months after each eye operation, a total 4 extra appointments. In addition to the standard tests performed as part of pre- and post-operative assessment for cataract surgery the investigators will perform the following tests.
Visual acuity testing:
It is standard to record near and distance vision before and after cataract surgery. The investigators will also assess middle-distance vision at 66 cm. The investigators will assess this at all appointments.
Slit lamp biomicroscopy, tonometry & dilated funduscopy:
At 6 weeks and 6-months following each eye surgery patients will be asked to attend out-patient visits during which they will have slit lamp examination, tonometry and dilated fundoscopy, as they have had done at enrolment.
A slit lamp is the microscope that an ophthalmologist or optician uses to examine the eye. Patients will have dilating drops applied to each eye (described below). These cause temporary dilation of the pupils which allow examination of the back of the eye, called dilated fundoscopy. Tonometry refers to measurement of the pressure of the eye.
Endothelial Cell Count This is an automated non-contact, non-invasive, specular microscope which produces and image and cell count of the inner layer of the cornea. It will be performed at preassessment, as well as 6 weeks and 6 months after each eye operation.
Dilating Eyedrops:
1 drop of each of 1% Tropicamide, and 2.5% phenylephrine will be instilled to each eye at every appointment to allow for complete examination of the eye.
Glasses:
At enrolment, the investigators will gather information on what glasses they currently use. The investigators will then ask them again at 6 months after each eye operation, and compare this with pre-operative data.
Contrast sensitivity:
The investigators will assess contrast sensitivity of both eyes at enrolment, and then the contrast sensitivity of the operated eye, 6 weeks & 6 months after each operation.
Stereoacuity:
The investigators will assess stereoacuity at enrolment and then 6 weeks and 6 months after the second eye operation.
Refraction:
The investigators will perform autorefraction at enrolment, 2 weeks, 6 weeks, and 6 months after surgery. The investigators will perform subjective refraction at 6 weeks and 6 months after surgery.
Refraction is a measurement of a patient's refractive error. This is measured in dioptres, and is used to generate a glasses prescription. Autorefraction refers to an automated measurement performed by a machine called an autorefractor. Subjective refraction is performed by an optometrist or ophthalmologist.
Schiempflug tomography/topography (Pentacam):
The investigators will perform this at enrolment, 6 weeks and 6 months after eye surgery. This will be performed to assess IOL decentration and tilt.
Macula OCT:
This is routinely performed before and after cataract surgery, to exclude cystoid macula oedema. The investigators will perform this as well at 6 weeks and 6 months after surgery.
Digital photograpy:
After instillation of dilating eyedrops, the investigators will perform intraocular lens photography to assess capsular opacification and lens glistenings at 6 months after surgery in either eye. Anonymised digital images may be shared with Prof Chris Hull at City University to help us assess glistening of the IOLs.
Questionnaires:
At enrolment, 6 weeks and 6-months visits, patients will be asked to complete PROM questionnaires, namely EQ-5D-3L, Catquest and Cat-PROM5. These questionnaires assess a patient's general health and attitudes to their vision.
Adverse events:
The investigators will document any adverse events at every appointment.
The investigators estimate it will take patients 120 minutes to complete this study enrolment / consent and extra investigations
Interim data will be reviewed at 20% completion of treatment and 6 month followup (following second eye surgery). The study completion date will be when Patient 140 has completed their 6 month visit (following second eye surgery) plus 14 days for data entry and database lock.
The investigators are testing the following hypotheses (theories)
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Any patient with other ocular condition that might reduce visual acuity and hence confound the results such as:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
140 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Scott Robbie, MBBS, PhD; Ashmal A Jameel, MBBS, BSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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