Why Brand Is the Wrong First Question
The question patients ask most often in premium lens consultations is which brand of lens to choose. It is the wrong first question.
A premium intraocular lens implanted with an imprecise power calculation will perform worse than a standard monofocal implanted with accurate biometry. Lens brand differences matter, but they sit downstream of the calculation that determines whether the lens will deliver its intended refractive outcome at all.
How Modern Biometry and Formulas Determine Accuracy
Modern IOL-calculation formulas have improved substantially. Barrett’s universal theoretical formula, now in widespread use, was among the first to account for anatomical variables earlier formulas approximated.¹ Subsequent work has continued to refine prediction accuracy, particularly in eyes with unusual axial lengths.² Comparative studies show meaningful differences between formulas, and the best formula depends on the individual eye.
Even the best formula works only as well as the measurements feeding into it. Axial length, keratometry, anterior chamber depth, and lens thickness must all be captured accurately. Unstable tear film corrupts keratometry readings; unusual axial length amplifies small measurement errors into clinically significant refractive surprises.
Norrby’s analysis of where residual IOL-calculation error comes from remains the clearest account of how small imprecisions compound into postoperative refractive error.³ The majority of error arises not from the lens, but from the measurements and the formula chosen to apply them.
The strongest premium lens cannot correct for an inaccurate calculation. The question is not which lens is best, but how rigorous the planning process is.
References
- Barrett GD. An improved universal theoretical formula for intraocular lens power prediction. J Cataract Refract Surg. 1993;19(6):713–720.
- Melles RB, Holladay JT, Chang WJ. Accuracy of intraocular lens calculation formulas. Ophthalmology. 2018;125(2):169–178.
- Norrby S. Sources of error in intraocular lens power calculation. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2008;34(3):368–376.
Related Topics
- Why Vision Outcomes Vary After Refractive Surgery – The Four-Domain Model
- Why do patients with the same prescription get different vision after surgery?
- How much of the final result is biology versus planning versus execution?
- Why does lens power calculation matter more than the lens itself?
- How do corneal shape and tear film affect final vision quality?
- Why do some patients take longer than others to neuroadapt to a new IOL?
- How does pre-existing dry eye change vision quality after laser or ICL?
- Why do realistic expectations correlate with better perceived outcomes?
- How much does surgical execution actually affect final vision quality?
- Why can two eyes in the same patient recover differently?
- What the surgeon controls versus what the eye decides
- What increases the risk of a poor outcome?