To report the long-term results of 44 keratoconic eyes treated by combined riboflavin
ultraviolet A collagen cross-linking in the first Italian open, nonrandomized phase
II clinical trial, the Siena Eye Cross Study.
Perspective, nonrandomized, open trial.
After Siena University Institutional Review Board approval, from September 2004 through
September 2008, 363 eyes with progressive keratoconus were treated with riboflavin
ultraviolet A collagen cross-linking. Forty-four eyes with a minimum follow-up of
48 months (mean, 52.4 months; range, 48 to 60 months) were evaluated before and after
surgery. Examinations comprised uncorrected visual acuity, best spectacle-corrected
visual acuity, spherical spectacle-corrected visual acuity, endothelial cells count
(I Konan, Non Con Robo; Konan Medical, Inc., Hyogo, Japan), optical (Visante OCT;
Zeiss, Jena, Germany) and ultrasound (DGH; Pachette, Exton, Pennsylvania, USA) pachymetry,
corneal topography and surface aberrometry (CSO EyeTop, Florence, Italy), tomography
(Orbscan IIz; Bausch & Lomb Inc., Rochester, New York, USA), posterior segment optical
coherence tomography (Stratus OCT; Zeiss, Jena, Germany), and in vivo confocal microscopy
(HRT II; Heidelberg Engineering, Rostock, Germany).
Keratoconus stability was detected in 44 eyes after 48 months of minimum follow-up;
fellow eyes showed a mean progression of 1.5 diopters in more than 65% after 24 months,
then were treated. The mean K value was reduced by a mean of 2 diopters, and coma
aberration reduction with corneal symmetry improvement was observed in more than 85%.
The mean best spectacle-corrected visual acuity improved by 1.9 Snellen lines, and
the uncorrected visual acuity improved by 2.7 Snellen lines.
The results of the Siena Eye Cross Study showed a long-term stability of keratoconus
after cross-linking without relevant side effects. The uncorrected visual acuity and
best spectacle-corrected visual acuity improvements were supported by clinical, topographic,
and wavefront modifications induced by the treatment.
Copyright 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.