# Corneal Tomographic Changes in Keratoconus Associated with Scleral Lens Wear: A Case-Control Analysis for 12-Month Follow-Up

**Authors:** Wei-Hsiang Lin, Tsung-Hsien Tsai, Ching-Hsi Hsiao, Chi-Chin Sun, Jiahn-Shing Lee, Ken-Kuo Lin

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina61040728 · 2025-04-15

## TL;DR

This study found that wearing scleral lenses for a year in keratoconus patients improved vision and slowed corneal changes compared to using spectacles.

## Contribution

The study provides new evidence on the 12-month impact of scleral lenses on corneal tomography in keratoconus using a case-controlled design.

## Key findings

- Scleral lenses improved best corrected visual acuity compared to spectacles and maintained it over 12 months.
- The SL group showed less progression in posterior corneal curvature and corneal thickness compared to the control group.
- Key corneal parameters like Ambrósio relational thickness and posterior keratometry had significant interaction effects favoring the SL group.

## Abstract

Background and Objectives: Scleral lenses are widely used for visual rehabilitation in keratoconus patients, but their long-term effects on corneal tomography remain unclear. This study aims to evaluate the impact of 12-month scleral lens wear on corneal tomography in keratoconus patients through a case-controlled design. Materials and Methods: This retrospective study included 220 keratoconus patients, of whom 10 eyes were treated with SoClear (Brighten Optix Corporation, Taipei, Taiwan) mini-scleral lenses for over one year (SL group). A control group of 14 eyes was matched using Mahalanobis distance matching based on anterior maximum keratometry (Kmax) and age. Both groups were evaluated at baseline and 12 months. Corneal tomography was assessed using the Pentacam HR (Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany), analyzing parameters such as anterior and posterior corneal curvature, thinnest corneal thickness (TCT), and higher-order aberrations. Generalized estimating equations (GEEs) were employed to assess the time-by-treatment effect between the two groups. Results: The SL group included 10 eyes from eight patients (seven males, one female; mean age 30.40 ± 6.52 years), while the control group included 14 eyes from 11 patients (three males, wight females; mean age 27.43 ± 8.11 years). Best corrected visual acuity with spectacles improved significantly with scleral lenses (p = 0.011) and remained stable (p = 0.044) at 12 months. Significant interaction effects were found in Ambrósio relational thickness (p = 0.006), posterior radius curvature (p = 0.047), posterior mean keratometry (p = 0.019), posterior flat keratometry (p = 0.023), and thinnest corneal thickness angle (p = 0.023); the SL group demonstrated less progression in these parameters compared to the control group. Conclusions: This case-controlled study highlights the 12-month impact of scleral lenses on keratoconus, showing improved visual acuity compared to spectacles, stabilized posterior corneal curvature, and maintained corneal thickness. Further prospective studies with larger cohorts are needed to assess scleral lens effect on keratoconus progression.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** keratoconus (MONDO:0015486)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** SL (MESH:C564794), Keratoconus (MESH:D007640)
- **Chemicals:** Scleral Lens Wear (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12028667/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12028667