| Release: Tuesday,
September 7, 2004
Contact: John Ciccone, 703-591-2220
ASCRS Director of Communications
Lasers
Safely and Effectively Treat Eye Maladies in Children
First Study on a Large Number of Patients With Long-Term Follow-Up
Fairfax,
VA – The first study to document the safety and effectiveness
of the use of excimer lasers to treat a variety of eye maladies
in children was published today in the September edition of
the Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery.
The
primary purpose of the study was to evaluate the safety and
effectiveness of procedures using excimer lasers (phototherapeutic
keratectomy, PTK, or photorefractive keratotomy, PRK, with
PTK) to improve vision and reduce or eliminate pain, tearing,
and excessive sensitivity to light in children who ranged
from 8 years to 18 years. The study is significant because
it followed a fairly large number of patients, 41 children
(41 eyes), for a relatively long period, an average of 5 years
after their operations. The excimer lasers are of the same
type used to perform LASIK and other vision correction procedures
in adults.
“This
study indicates that lasers are offering pediatric ophthalmologists
the ability to treat a variety of eye conditions with greater
precision and control than are afforded by traditional means,”
said M. Edward Wilson, MD, chairman of the Pediatric Clinical
Committee of the American Society of Cataract and Refractive
Surgery, and chairman of the Department of Ophthalmology at
the Storm Eye Institute at the Medical University of South
Carolina. .
“The
traditional way of removing scars and calcifications on children’s
corneas (the clear, outermost part of the eye) involves the
manual scraping or debriding of the cornea with ophthalmic
instruments,” Wilson said. “Lasers allow the removal
of tissue by ablating it with a precision that can be measured
in thousandths of a millimeter, a definite improvement over
manual techniques,” he said.
“The
reason that we have been cautious in adopting lasers to treat
pediatric conditions reflects the extreme caution physicians
use in treating children. This study is important because
it demonstrates the long-term safety and effectiveness of
lasers in these applications,” he added.
The
study notes that an excimer laser was also used to treat a
painful condition in which the surface cells of the cornea
erode and fail to grow back properly. In such cases, the laser
successfully stimulates normal cell growth. Other applications
of the laser included correcting vision in children who had
cataract surgery, among others.
The
eye maladies resulted from a number of causes including infections,
injuries and side effects of other treatments.
Results:
Vision in all 41 children improved, and episodes of pain or
discomfort, excessive tearing, and sensitivity to light diminished.
One measure of vision improvement is the ability to read lines
of letters on the standard (Snellen) eye chart. Follow-up
evaluations of the children found that 8 had gained the ability
to read 5 or more Snellen lines, 11 gained 4 lines, 9 gained
3 lines, 7 gained 2 lines, and 4 gained 1 line in comparison
to their preoperative tests. One child was unchanged, and
no one lost visual acuity.
“Phototherapeutic
Keratectomy in Children: 5-Year Results,” is by Rudolf
Autrata, MD, PhD; Jaroslav Rehurek, MD, PhD; and Kristina
Vodickova, MD. The study was performed at the Department of
Ophthalmology of the Masaryk University Hospital in Brno,
Czech Republic.
|