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Up Front | May 2007

A New Model for Predicting Ectasia

Accounting for the imperfections of your surgical instruments can help you to avoid excessive keratectomy during LASIK.

Over the years, refractive surgeons have devised strategies for coping with some of the more common complications that can occur after LASIK. Nonetheless, ectasia, a condition characterized by a progressive increase in corneal curvature, remains somewhat of a mystery. Its most likely causes appear to be undetected preoperative keratoconus and excessively deep keratectomies. This article presents a model for calculating the minimal residual stromal thickness required to maintain corneal structural integrity.1 When this model is applied to an individual eye, it may help surgeons predict the risk of developing post-LASIK ectasia.2

ACCOUNTING FOR IMPRECISION
Current methods for predicting residual stromal thickness contain elements of imprecision that can result in an excessively deep keratectomy and thus increase the risk of postoperative ectasia. The equation appears to be straightforward: residual stroma = preoperative corneal thickness - flap thickness - ablation depth. The result cannot be considered accurate, however, because it does not account for the bias (the difference between the measured and actual values) and the precision (the degree of variation in a series of values) of the microkeratome, excimer laser, and pachymeter (Figure 1).

My colleagues and I have developed a probability model that mathematically combines the bias and imprecision of these components to calculate the risk of exceeding the predicted residual stromal thickness for an individual eye.

MICROKERATOMES AND RESIDUAL STROMAL THICKNESS
Of the variables that can contribute to excessive keratectomy, the microkeratome is currently the greatest source of imprecision. To put the degree of imprecision in a clinical context, my colleagues and I obtained mean and standard deviation values of flap thickness from published peer-reviewed articles. The flaps were created with microkeratomes manufactured by Alcon Laboratories, Inc. (Fort Worth, TX), Advanced Medical Optics, Inc. (Santa Ana, CA), Bausch & Lomb (Rochester, NY), IntraLase Corp. (Irvine, CA), Moria (Antony, France), and Nidek, Inc. (Fremont, CA). We used our model to calculate for each microkeratome the probability of producing a residual stromal thickness of less than 200 µm, given a predicted thickness of 250 µm.

Our model showed that the chance of leaving a residual stromal thickness of less than 200 µm, given a predicted thickness of 250 µm, ranged between 33.59 with the Moria CB (Moria) to <0.1 with the Hansatome (Bausch & Lomb), ACS (Bausch & Lomb), and the MK-2000 (Nidek, Inc.). The source of the significant differences among the microkeratomes was the combination of their bias and precision. The microkeratomes that had a high probability of leaving a residual stromal thickness of less than 200 µm had a positive bias (actual mean flap thickness > labeled thickness) and a large standard deviation in flap thickness. Conversely, the microkeratomes that had a low probability of exceeding the predicted thickness of 250 µm had a negative bias (actual mean flap thickness < labeled mean flap thickness) and a small standard deviation.

For example, the labeled flap thickness of the Moria CB with the 130 head was 160 µm, but the measured mean flap thickness was 198 ±26 µm.3 Therefore, 93 of eyes treated with this microkeratome would have flaps that were thicker than intended, including 50 that were 38 µm thicker and 32 that were 50 µm thicker. In comparison, the labeled flap thickness of the zero compression Hansatome with the 160 head was 160 µm. The measured mean thickness of flaps created with this microkeratome was 124 ±17 µm.4 The probability of this instrument's creating flaps that are thicker than intended is much lower than with the Moria CB, only 1.7 of eyes. Only 0.00002 of flaps created with the Hansatome would be 50 µm thicker than intended.

These data demonstrate that a microkeratome's safety is improved if it is labeled with a flap thickness greater than the actual mean flap thickness. Standardizing this practice would minimize the percentage of flaps that end up thicker than the labeled value.

CALCULATING A POPULATION'S RISK FOR ECTASIA
My colleagues and I applied the model for individual eyes to a clinical population in order to (1) identify a residual stromal thickness below which ectasia appears likely to occur and (2) to use this information to establish a safe minimal residual stromal thickness for patients undergoing cornea-based refractive surgery with any set of instruments.

We expanded the model to incorporate the distribution of myopia and corneal thickness in a population of eyes undergoing LASIK. The percentage of eyes expected to obtain an actual residual stromal thickness below a chosen cutoff after treatment with specific surgical equipment could then be calculated by applying the probability distribution of that residual stromal thickness to each eye individually.

We set up the model to represent a case series of 5,212 myopic eyes treated at LASIK Vision Canada in Vancouver, British Columbia, over a 3-year period by a single surgeon using the same microkeratome (Moria LSK-One with the -1 head; Moria) and laser (Nidek EC5000; Nidek, Inc.) The model would predict the percentage of eyes in the population expected to have a residual stromal thickness below a selected cutoff. For example, the model predicted that 0.248 of eyes would have a residual stromal thickness of less than 200 µm (Figure 2).

We knew that six of the eyes (0.115) treated in this case series went on to develop ectasia. All of the patients had been screened preoperatively with the Orbscan corneal topographer (Bausch & Lomb), so we assumed that ectasia was caused by excessive keratectomy versus keratoconus. We then used this information to back-calculate the residual stromal thickness at which ectasia occurred in this population.

Setting the residual stromal thickness cutoff to 250 µm predicted that 5 of the eyes in the case series would develop ectasia. Because this was significantly more than the observed percentage of 0.115, we could tell that the patients in this series needed a residual stromal thickness of less than 250 µm to develop ectasia. Setting the cutoff to 191 µm predicted that 0.115 of the eyes in the case series would develop ectasia, which matched the number of cases we observed. Therefore, we concluded that ectasia in this case series occurred for eyes that had 191 µm or less of residual stromal thickness.

We recognized that additional incidences of ectasia might have occurred in this series that were lost to follow-up or might have been caused by something other than excessively deep keratectomy, so we repeated the analysis, assuming that one to 12 cases were observed. The model predicted that a residual stromal thickness of 178 µm and 199 µm would produce one and 12 cases of ectasia in this series, respectively.

CALCULATING THE MINIMAL SAFE RESIDUAL STROMAL THICKNESS
In addition to determining the minimal residual stromal thickness for ectasia in a specific case series, our probability model can be used to calculate the targeted residual stromal thickness that will minimize the risk of ectasia in a clinical setting. Once surgeons enter information into the model about the microkeratome, laser, and pachymeter they use, they can set the cutoff to the residual stromal thickness at which ectasia is likely to occur (191 µm in our series). The model will predict how many cases they can expect to see when LASIK is performed using the specified clinical protocol. Surgeons can use this information to assess refractive surgery candidates with an eye toward minimizing the number of cases of ectasia in their practice.

For example, if we had targeted 280 µm as our minimal stromal thickness in the case series from LASIK Vision Canada, the model would have predicted a rate of ectasia of 153 per million versus 1,152 cases per million. In the same population, targeting a residual stromal thickness of 310 µm would have reduced the rate of ectasia to 8.8. To reduce the incidence to one in 1 million, we would have to target a residual stromal thickness of 329 µm, thus disqualifying 66.3 of the eyes from LASIK.

CONCLUSION
The probability model discussed in this article highlights several factors that may help surgeons understand the relationship between ectasia and LASIK. First, the accuracy and standard deviation of the microkeratome, laser, and pachymeter used during LASIK affects the depth of the keratectomy and, thus, the risk for ectasia. Second, there is no universally safe minimal targeted residual stromal thickness for LASIK, so the commonly accepted guideline of 250 µm should be treated with caution. The minimal targeted residual stromal thickness is actually a variable that depends on the bias and imprecision of the instruments being used and, as such, should ideally be derived for each clinical setting. Finally, this model indicates that ectasia becomes more likely in eyes that have less than 200 µm of residual stroma after LASIK.

Dan Z. Reinstein, MD, MA(Cantab), FRCSC, DABO, FRCOphth, is Medical Director of the London Vision Clinic in London, UK. He acknowledged no financial interest in the products or companies mentioned herein. Dr. Reinstein may be reached at 44 20 7224 1005; dzr@londonvisionclinic.com.



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