Purpose
To compare the effect on the corneal endothelium of femtosecond laser–assisted cataract surgery and conventional phacoemulsification cataract surgery.
Setting
Private clinic, Tasmania, Australia.
Design
Prospective comparative cohort study.
Methods
Femtosecond laser–assisted cataract surgery (study group) or conventional phacoemulsification (control group) was performed. The central corneal thickness, central 3.0 mm corneal volume, volume stress index, and central endothelial cell density (ECD) were measured preoperatively and 1 day, 3 weeks, and 6 months postoperatively.
Results
The study group comprised 405 eyes and the control group, 215 eyes. Postoperative corneal edema was significantly less in the study group at 1 day and 3 weeks. However, the difference was negligible at 6 months. The study group had significant reductions in ECD loss compared with the control group at 3 weeks but not at 6 months (6-month mean −150 cells/mm2 ± 244 [SD] versus −149 cells/mm2 ± 233). Eyes in the study group with laser-automated corneal incisions had greater endothelial cell loss at 6 months than eyes in the study group with manual corneal incisions and eyes in the control group (P<.0001). Eyes in the study group with zero effective phaco time and manually created corneal incisions had statistically significantly less endothelial cell loss at 6 months than the other groups (P<.0001).
Conclusions
Femtosecond laser pretreatment for cataract surgery was associated with a significant reduction in early postoperative corneal edema and endothelial cell loss compared with conventional phacoemulsification; however, the difference diminished with time. Laser-automated corneal incisions seemed to adversely affect the corneal endothelial cells.
Financial Disclosure
No author has a financial or proprietary interest in any material or method mentioned.