Objective and subjective evaluation of the performance of medical contact lenses fitted using a contact lens selection algorithm

A B S T R A C T

Purpose: To evaluate the performance of medical contact lenses (CLs) for a wide range of clinical indications.

Design: Prospective cross-sectional study.

Methods: A total of 281 eyes were evaluated in 281 consecutive patients (>18 years of age; CL use >3 months) who visited the contact lens service in a tertiary academic clinic for a scheduled follow-up visit. The main outcome measured were clinical indications for CL wear; CL type; change in corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) with CL use; CL wearing duration; CL wearing time; subjective performance measured using a visual analog scale (VAS) questionnaire (score range: 0–100); and effectiveness of the lens-selection algorithm.

Results: Wearing CLs significantly improved CDVA compared to wearing spectacles (median change: -0.15 logMAR, range: 1.00 to -2.10; P<.001). Daily-wear CLs were worn by 77% of patients for a median of 15 h/day (range: 5–18 h/day), median 7 days/week (range: 1–7 days/week). High subjective scores were measured, with similar results obtained between the scleral lens and soft lens groups. The medical CL fitting was found to be generally effective (the overall satisfaction rating was >70 for 81% of patients).

Conclusions: Fitting CLs based on the lens-selection algorithm yielded positive clinical results, including improved visual acuity, satisfactory wearing time, and high overall subjective performance. Moreover, subjective performance was similar between users of scleral lenses and users of soft lenses. These results underscore the importance of prescribing scleral lenses and the need for tertiary eye clinics to offer patients a variety of CL types.

Dit artikel is gepubliceerd in Contact lens & anterior eye: the journal of the British Contact Lens Association, Februari 2016. Link naar het gehele artikel.