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At what level of residual prescription would enhancement be considered?

3 min read

Enhancement following ICL surgery is not a reflexive response to any measurable residual refractive error. Minor residual prescriptions – particularly within 0.50 dioptres of plano – may not produce meaningful functional impairment and do not require surgical correction. ¹ Enhancement is a clinical decision, not a metric one, and it requires both objective criteria and patient-reported functional concern to be present before a second procedure is appropriate.

At Blue Fin Vision®, the threshold for enhancement consideration is a residual refractive error of 1.00 dioptre or more, combined with the patient experiencing a genuine functional limitation attributable to that error. Below that threshold, continued monitoring and optical correction – where needed – is the preferred approach. Above it, the case for laser enhancement on clinical grounds is substantive. ²

This threshold is not arbitrary. It reflects the clinical risk-benefit calculation inherent in any elective surgical intervention: the corrective benefit of laser applied to a residual 0.50 D myope is modest; the benefit in a patient with a 1.50 D residual prescription is clinically meaningful. Applying the same threshold regardless of the patient’s functional symptoms would be a departure from the individualised clinical decision-making that the Blue Fin Vision® consultation philosophy requires. ³

Patients should ask this question explicitly at their pre-operative consultation – not post-operatively when residual error has already been identified. Understanding the enhancement criteria in advance is part of the informed consent process.

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. Kohnen T, Maxwell WA, Holland S, Tetz M. Intraocular collamer lens for high myopia: results from the ICL in Treatment of Myopia (ITM) study. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(8):1392–1400. PMID: 18359068.

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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.