ESCRS - ESCRS on CXL at AAO 2016 ;
ESCRS - ESCRS on CXL at AAO 2016 ;

ESCRS on CXL at AAO 2016

ESCRS on CXL at AAO 2016
Howard Larkin
Howard Larkin
Published: Sunday, October 16, 2016
[caption id="attachment_5992" align="alignnone" width="750"] David Touboul MD presents on CXL with corneal rings as Rudy Nuijts MD, PhD and Thomas Kohnen MD, PhD look on.[/caption] With corneal crosslinking (CXL) finally approved this year by the USA Food and Drug Administration, ESCRS members schooled American colleagues on the latest in CXL technology at Refractive Surgery Subspecialty Day sponsored by the International Society of Refractive Surgery at the 2016 American Academy of Ophthalmology Annual Meeting in Chicago, USA. In his review of indications and long-term outcomes for CXL in keratoconus, Rudy MMA Nuijts MD PhD, of the Academic Hospital Maastricht, The Netherlands, noted standard Dresden protocol CXL provides stable long-term results for visual acuity and keratometry in 90 per cent of patients. In children, epithelium-off CXL provides persistent treatment effect up to four years in 80 to 90 per cent of patients. Preliminary data suggests CXL will lead to a decrese of at least 25 per cent in corneal transplants for keratoconus. Topography-guided PRK combined with CXL has proven an effective treatment for post-LASIK ectasia and visual rehabilitation over 12 years, said A John Kanellopoulos MD of Athens, Greece, and New York University, USA. The Athens Protocol, as it is known, has advantages over alternatives such as CXL alone, which does little to address corneal aberrations, and lamellar or penetrating keratoplasty. Dr Kanellopoulos stressed the procedure is therapeutic rather than refractive in that is does not seek to correct refractice error, but to reduce asymmetric astigmatism to tolerable levels. Other presenters were Thomas Kohnen MD, PhD, of Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany on accelerated CXL; David Touboul MD, of the University of Bordeaux, France, on CXL with corneal rings; and Simonetta Morselli MD, of the University of Verona, Italy, on CXL for treating corneal infections.            
Tags: AAO 2016
Latest Articles
From Lab to Life: Corneal Repair Goes Cellular

Long-awaited cellular therapies for corneal endothelial disease enter the clinic.

Read more...

Balancing Innovation and Safety

Ensuring access to advanced cell therapies amid regulatory overhaul.

Read more...

With Eyes on Its Future, ESCRS Celebrates Its Past

Winter Meeting offers opportunities to experiment with new concepts and formats.

Read more...

Best of ESCRS Winter Meeting 2024

Read more...

Following the New Generation

EDOF IOLs an option for eyes with mild comorbidities, showing potential in mini-monovision strategies.

Read more...

Refocus on Multifocals

Trifocal IOLs continue to improve as consensus grows regarding indications and contraindications.

Read more...

Common Myths in Presbyopia Correction

Patient education key to satisfaction with refractive IOLs.

Read more...

Reversible Multifocality

Two-lens combination offers low-risk spectacle independence for cataract patients and presbyopes.

Read more...

Managing a Cataract Surgery Refractive Miss

Weighing the pros and cons of options for intraocular intervention.

Read more...

Unleashing OCT’s Full Potential

Performance of newest tool for corneal evaluation meets or beats older standard technologies.

Read more...

;