Cataract and lens replacement surgery is irreversible. The lens chosen at age 60 must continue to perform at age 80. Long-term visual quality outcomes, beyond the 12-month satisfaction window, are the most important data point in lens selection, and the least frequently published.
The Medium-Term Picture (2-5 Years)
At 2-5 years, the majority of trifocal and EDOF IOL recipients maintain spectacle independence and acceptable contrast sensitivity. Cochrane analysis confirms that multifocal lenses deliver greater spectacle independence than monofocal lenses, with comparable distance acuity and a higher reported rate of dysphotopsia, most of which improves over time.¹
The Long-Term Picture (5+ Years)
Beyond 5 years, the dominant variables shift from lens type to ocular ageing: macular changes, posterior capsular opacification, dry eye progression, corneal aberration drift, and pupil ageing.² Posterior capsular opacification is treated with YAG laser capsulotomy. Macular changes, age-related or pre-existing, affect contrast and reading acuity regardless of lens type.
What Outcomes Data Does and Does Not Tell You
Manufacturer trial outcomes are typically reported at 3-12 months in carefully selected patients. They do not predict the experience of the average patient at 8 years.³ Real-world long-term data, particularly when audited against national datasets, is the more honest predictor of the lens’s behaviour over time.
The Clinical Position
The right premium lens is not the one that performs best on the manufacturer’s chart. It is the one that continues to perform when the eye changes around it. That requires selection that anticipates ageing, not selection that optimises for the first postoperative photo.
References
- Calladine D, Evans JR, Shah S, Leyland M. Multifocal versus monofocal intraocular lenses after cataract extraction. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012;(9):CD003169.
- Alió JL, Plaza-Puche AB, Fernández-Buenaga R, Pikkel J, Maldonado M. Multifocal intraocular lenses: An overview. Surv Ophthalmol. 2017;62(5):611-634.
- Hawker MJ, Madge SN, Baddeley PA, Perry SR. Refractive expectations of patients having cataract surgery. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2005;31(10):1970-1975.
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