| Release: Tuesday,
August 1, 2004
Contact:Samuel Masket, MD, (310) 229 1220
New
Diagnostic Technology Helps Justify Earlier Cataract Surgery
Early Treatment Enhances Patient Safety,
Limits Degradation of Quality of Life Before Treatment
Fairfax,
VA - A study published today in the August edition of the
Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery reports that
wavefront technology, a new way of measuring how vision is
distorted by irregularities in the eye, offers a widely accepted
means for corroborating cataract patients’ vision complaints,
which may lead to earlier treatment with attendant enhanced
patient safety and less loss of quality of life.
The study, Higher-Order Aberrations of Lenticular
Opacities, by N. Sachdev, S. Ormonde, T. Sherwin, and C. McGhee,
found that different types of cataracts produced identifiable
and repeatable results using wavefront diagnostic equipment.
These results could explain the significant visual symptoms
in patients with early cataracts that the most commonly used
vision test does not demonstrate. The study was performed
at the Departments of Ophthalmology at the University of Auckland
and the Auckland Public Hospital in New Zealand.
The significance of this study is that it
shows wavefront testing can be used to accurately measure
the visual errors that show up as glare and other problems
that cataract patients experience. This will give insurance
companies a reliable and widely accepted means of testing
for the effects of cataracts on patients’ vision and
for making reliable determinations of the medical need for
a cataract operation. Its impact on patient welfare is that
it can reduce the number of patients who are unable to receive
early treatment because alternative testing means are inadequate
or not widely accepted.
Cataracts and their treatment
Cataracts are the leading cause of preventable blindness worldwide,
and cataract surgery is among the most common surgical procedures
in people over 65 years of age in the United States. Last
year, 2,775,000 procedures were performed in the U.S. (one
procedure = one eye). A cataract is the clouding of the normally
clear, natural crystalline lens of the eye. As cataracts increase
in size and density, they reduce the amount of light passing
through the lens, which results in blindness if not treated.
In the U.S., Medicare, the federal government’s health
insurance program for the elderly, paid for 1.733 million
procedures in 2002, according to the most recent data. Modern
cataract treatment surgically removes the damaged lens and
replaces it with an artificial one.
Because cataracts tend to grow gradually,
one of the most important treatment issues is determining
when they degrade vision to the point that the patient is
at an increased risk of falls or accidents, or that their
quality of life has been significantly undermined. (An August
2002, study reported in the Journal of the American Medical
Association found that cataract patients who had surgery to
treat the condition had 50 percent fewer car accidents than
those patients who did not.)
Medicare and most insurance programs will
pay the cost of cataract removal once a patient’s vision
has deteriorated to 20/50 or less when reading the standard
(Snellen) eye chart, which was developed about 100 years ago.
By contrast, states typically require at least 20/40 vision
for driving without glasses.
Cataract patients often complain of glare,
double vision, a shift in colors, and other problems. “There
have been innumerable articles and textbook chapters noting
that the Snellen test does not document the visual deficits
experienced by cataract patients,” said Samuel Masket,
MD, chair of the Eye Surgery Education Council. While some
insurance companies will cover the cost of cataract surgery
based on additional testing, there is no widely accepted test
that can corroborate patient’s vision complaints.
“Patients are often in the position
of having to curtail night driving because cataracts have
made it dangerous or they have to cut back participation in
other activities that enrich their lives, but they can’t
seek treatment because insurance testing criteria exclude
them from coverage until their vision degrades to a point
that is measurable by an outdated test,” Masket said.
Wavefront
technology involves the use of a laser that beams light into
the eye. As the light is reflected through the eye, it is
distorted by abnormalities in the eye’s components.
The distorted light is analyzed by a computer program, which
can display the aberrations as mathematical values or as a
map of the eye. Wavefront technology is being used to make
custom treatment maps of the eye and guide lasers during LASIK
to correct nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism.
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