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A new minimally invasive procedure for treating presbyopia is being evaluated to determine if there is improvement in near and intermediate vision after treatment.
Full description
This is a prospective, controlled, single-center clinical study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Laser Scleral Microporation Procedure.
Laser Scleral Microporation Procedure is a treatment to restore visual and accommodative function in presbyopic patients. The subjects are bilaterally treated with the Laser Scleral Microporation procedure.
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Inclusion criteria
Willing and able to understand and sign an informed consent;
Willing and able to attend postoperative examinations per protocol schedule;
45 years of age or greater, of either gender or any race;
Less than (<) 1.00D of astigmatism in each eye, measured in their manifest refraction;
Mean refractive spherical equivalent refraction (MRSE) of +/- 0.50D for distance vision; Note: Subjects who meet this criterion as a result of prior laser refractive surgery (LASIK, LASEK or PRK) may qualify; however, the subject must have had the LVC procedure performed at least 12 months prior to the Laser Scleral Microporation procedure and be stable.
Uncorrected distance visual acuity (UDVA) is better than or equal to 20/40 (logMAR 0.30) in each eye, and a Corrected Distance Visual Acuity (CDVA) is better than or equal to 20/25 (logMAR 0.10) in each eye;
Demonstrate Stereopsis of 100 seconds of arc or better using a Randot stereoscopic fly test and reading correction;
In good ocular health with the exception of presbyopia;
Presbyopia as demonstrated by:
Intraocular pressure (IOP) >11mmHg and < 30 mmHg in each eye without IOP-lowering medication;
Less than or equal to (≤) 0.50D difference between the manifest refraction and the cycloplegic refraction;
Stable distance refraction is present, defined as ≤ 0.50D variation of refraction in the 12 months prior to the Laser Scleral Microporation procedure. Manifest refraction cannot vary more than 0.50D from current spectacles that are at least 12 months of age, or from a documented refraction at least 12 months prior to the preoperative baseline exam; if baseline data is available.
Completed a washout period of two weeks (14 days) prior to Laser Scleral Microporation procedure from prior treatment with:
With prior medical clearance: NSAIDS, blood thinners, aspirin, and other substances which may increase bleeding;
Anti-oxidants, which could affect blood thinning14
Exclusion criteria
Self-reported current pregnancy or breast-feeding, or plans to become pregnant during the entire study period;
History of ocular trauma or prior ocular surgery, or expected to require retinal laser treatment or other ocular surgical intervention;
Presence of ocular pathology other than cataract such as:
Known pathology that may affect visual acuity and/or are predicted to cause future acuity losses to a level of 20/30 (logMAR 0.18) or worse (e.g., macular degeneration);
Previous corneal surgery (e.g., corneal transplant, DSAEK/DSEK, lamellar keratoplasty), except for LASIK, EpiLASIK/LASEK, or PRK;
Previous anterior or posterior chamber surgery (e.g., vitrectomy, laser iridotomy);
Keratoconus or keratoconus suspect with CDVA of less than (<) 20/20 (< logMAR 0.00) at distance;
Near visual acuity at 40cm equivalent to their distance vision with distance correction (i.e., no evident effect of reduced accommodative range);
Use of systemic or ocular medications that may affect vision (the use of any miotic or cycloplegic agent is specifically contraindicated);
Acute or chronic disease or illness that could increase the operative risk or confound the study outcome(s) (e.g., diabetes mellitus, immunocompromised, connective tissue disease);
Uncontrolled systemic or ocular disease;
Any abnormality preventing reliable applanation tonometry in EITHER eye;
Undilatable pupil such that one cannot examine the periphery of the retina;
Functional eye preference, defined as phoria measuring over 15dp horizontally and/or over 2dp vertically, any strabismus, or suppression.
History of scleral ectasia, scleritis, or episcleritis
History of nuclear sclerosis LOCS III grade 2 or worse and/or other cataracts reducing CDVA;
Known allergies to study medications including topical steroids, antibiotics and NSAIDS;
Too thin sclera thickness
Per PI discretion, as described below:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
11 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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