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Patients implanted with the ReSTOR 2.5 multifocal IOL in the dominant eye and the ReSTOR 3.0 in the non-dominant eye have overall satisfaction and spectacle independence at least comparable to that with bilateral implantation of the 3.0 add lens. Glare and haloes and other unwanted visual side effects with this mixed combination of lenses is better than with bilateral 3.0 lenses.
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Patients desire spectacle independence for a range of distances, including distance, intermediate, and near. The ReSTOR 2.5 multifocal lens has been designed to allow better uncorrected intermediate vision and reduce glare and haloes compared to previous, higher-add models. However, their impact on overall patient satisfaction, glare & haloes (incidence and impact), and spectacle independence has not been examined with a patient-reported outcome study. Additionally, in clinical practice, many clinicians find that bilateral implantation of ReSTOR 2.5 yields insufficient near vision for about 30% of patients (1). For this reason, many surgeons prefer to implant the ReSTOR 2.5 in one eye (usually the dominant) and the ReSTOR 3.0 in the other eye.
MDbackline is a multi-center patient-reported research engine that has been in use since 2013 for data collection in several patient-reported outcome studies for major industry sponsors. Studies performed with MDbackline have been presented at major meetings and are in press with peer-reviewed journals. The investigators have previously conducted studies of patient satisfaction and spectacle independence with the higher add (3.0) multifocal lens prior to the approval of the ReSTOR 2.5. These data, which include about 85 patients, will be used as historical references. They showed a high degree of satisfaction and spectacle independence but complaints of glare and haloes in as many as 37% of patients ("a fair amount of glare" or more). (2) Since approval of the ReSTOR 2.5, the investigators have clinically observed far fewer complaints of glare/haloes when the lower-add lens is used in at least one eye.
In this study the investigators propose to evaluate patients with the ReSTOR 2.5 lens in one eye and the ReSTOR 3.0 in the other using substantially the same questionnaire in the previous study described above. The investigators plan to compare results of these new data (2.5/3.0 combination) with the previous study data (3.0/3.0).
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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