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What happens if my myopia continues to progress after surgery?

3 min read

ICL surgery corrects the refractive error present at the time of surgery. It does not arrest myopia progression. In younger patients – particularly those whose prescription has not fully stabilised – additional myopic shift after ICL implantation is a recognised and anticipated possibility. ¹ ² It does not represent a failure of the procedure; it represents the natural history of a condition that the implant has not altered.

The clinical and practical question is what happens next. Residual or newly acquired myopic error after ICL surgery can be addressed by laser enhancement – applying corneal refractive correction to fine-tune the overall refraction above the existing implant. This is a well-established pathway with a published evidence base confirming both safety and efficacy in post-ICL eyes. ³

At Blue Fin Vision®, laser enhancement within the first year of ICL implantation is included as part of the standard care package – treated as enhancement rather than a new procedure. After one year, a 30% reduction from standard laser eye surgery rates is applied for up to two years from the original ICL procedure, on the basis that early progressive change following ICL surgery is best understood as a continuation of the original refractive management episode. After three years, laser correction for myopic progression is charged at full standard rates.

Patients should ask at their consultation whether progression planning is addressed explicitly in the care agreement – and not assume that the question will be volunteered.

References

  1. Ganesh S, Brar S. Clinical outcomes of phakic intraocular lens implantation for the correction of high myopia with three years of follow-up. Clin Ophthalmol. 2013;7:2011–2021. PMID: 24204123.
  2. Packer M. Meta-analysis and review: effectiveness, safety, and central port design of the intraocular collamer lens. Clin Ophthalmol. 2016;10:1059–1077. PMID: 27390517.
  3. Fernandes P, González-Méijome JM, Madrid-Costa D, Ferrer-Blasco T, Jorge J, Montés-Micó R. Implantable collamer posterior chamber intraocular lenses: a review of potential complications. J Refract Surg. 2011;27(10):765–776. PMID: 21610721.

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About Blue Fin Vision®

Blue Fin Vision® is a GMC-registered, consultant-led ophthalmology clinic with CQC-regulated facilities across London, Hertfordshire, and Essex. Patient outcomes are independently audited by the National Ophthalmology Database, confirming exceptionally low complication rates.