Impact Of Tear Film Stability On Corneal Refractive Power Measurement And Surgical Planning For Cataract
Published 2025 - 43rd Congress of the ESCRS
Reference: PO455 | Type: Free paper | DOI: 10.82333/tx0q-mn37
Authors: Xiteng Chen 1 , Fang Tian* 1
1Tianjin Medical University Eye Hospital,Tianjin,China
Purpose
To evaluate the impact of tear film stability on corneal refractive power measurement and surgical planning in cataract patients.
Setting
Tianjin Medical University Eye Hospital, Tianjin, China
Methods
Using the results of Keratograph 5M, patients with cataracts preoperatively were divided into a dry-eye group (tear film stability level 2) and a control group (level 0-1). Two measurements were performed using IOL Master 700 with an interval of 10 minutes. The standard keratometry, keratometric corneal astigmatism, total keratometry and total corneal astigmatism were recorded. The IOL power was calculated using SRK-T, SRK-T TK, Haigis, Haigis TK, Barrett Universal II, and Barrett Universal II TK formulas. The absolute value of the difference between two measurements (Δ) or two calculation results, and the mean magnitude of vector difference of corneal astigmatism were calculated and compared between groups.
Results
ΔKf, ΔKCA, ΔTKf, ΔTK, and vector variability of corneal astigmatism were significantly higher in the dry-eye group (all P < 0.05). Bland-Altman analyses showed broader 95% limits of agreement in the dry-eye group. Of all formulas, only the SRK-T formula displayed significantly higher variability in IOL power calculations in the dry eye group compared to the control group (P < 0.05).
Conclusions
Tear film instability can result in deviations in the measurement of preoperative corneal refractive power and corneal astigmatism. Dry eyes contribute to an increased prediction error in the IOL power calculation, especially for the SRK-T formula.