ESCRS - PO0685 - A Novel Metric To Monitor Early Progression In Keratoconus: Epithelial Backscatter

A Novel Metric To Monitor Early Progression In Keratoconus: Epithelial Backscatter

Published 2023 - 41st Congress of the ESCRS

Reference: PO0685 | Type: Free paper | DOI: 10.82333/wd8w-1b67

Authors: Ibrahim Toprak* 1 , Celal Emre Gunes 1 , Cigdem Martin-Seker 1

1Ophthalmology,Pamukkale University,Denizli,Türkiye

Purpose

To assess the progression of keratoconus over the course of one-year using epithelial and anterior stromal backscatter, Belin ABCD progression display, and various Pentacam® parameters and to determine whether backscatter measurements can be utilized to monitor progression.

Setting

Pamukkale University Hospital

Methods

This single-centre, cross-sectional study evaluated change in epithelial and anterior stromal backscatter (using the line densitometry feature of the Pentacam®), the flat, steep, mean and maximum keratometry, Belin ABCD progression display, corneal elevations, Belin/Ambrósio enhanced ectasia display (BAD-D), pachymetric progression index (PPI), maximum Ambrósio relational thickness (ARTmax), and topometric indices, between baseline and one-year in treatment-naïve 37 eyes (37 patients) with keratoconus.

Results

When compared to the baseline after one-year, epithelial backscatter increased (p<0.05); posterior radius of curvature, BAD-D, average PPI, index of vertical asymmetry (IVA), and index of height decentration (IHD) worsened (p<0.05); and the anterior stromal backscatter, keratometry values, Belin ABCD stages, thinnest pachymetry, elevations, and ARTmax remained stable (p>0.05). There were statistically significant weak-to-moderate correlations between the backscatter values and Pentacam® parameters (p<0.05).

Conclusions

Epithelial backscatter can be considered a novel parameter to monitor the progression of keratoconus, as it was found to have similar abilities to those of the posterior radius of curvature, BAD-D, average PPI, IVA, and IHD, all of which demonstrated early evolution during one-year of follow-up, while the front keratometric data exhibited no progression. Moreover, by generalizing single-point backscatter data to the entire corneal surface, epithelial backscatter can be integrated into Pentacam® maps as a novel feature in keratoconus diagnosis and progression follow-up.