Preoperative Risk Factors for Dry Eye Symptoms After Cataract Surgery: Femtosecond Laser-Assisted Cataract Surgery (FLACS) Versus Standard Cataract Surgery (SCS)
Elvia Mastrogiuseppe, Luca Lucchino, Francesca Giovannetti, Mattia D’Andrea, Davide Mastromarino, Alice Bruscolini, Alessandro Lambiase, Marco Marenco

TL;DR
This study finds that preoperative eye health is a key predictor of dry eye symptoms after cataract surgery, regardless of the surgical technique used.
Contribution
The study identifies baseline OSDI and Oxford score as significant predictors of postoperative dry eye symptoms, offering guidance for patient risk assessment.
Findings
Baseline OSDI and Oxford score were independent predictors of postoperative dry eye symptoms.
FLACS caused a transient worsening of symptoms, while SCS had a milder effect.
Surgical technique and perioperative parameters were not significant predictors.
Abstract
Background: Despite technological advancements in cataract surgery, including Femtosecond Laser-Assisted Cataract Surgery (FLACS), postoperative dry eye disease (DED) remains a challenge, impacting patients’ quality of life. Identifying preoperative predictors of ocular discomfort could improve patient management. Methods: This exploratory prospective study compared the onset of DED symptoms and ocular surface changes after FLACS and standard cataract surgery (SCS). Twenty eyes were evaluated preoperatively and postoperatively, using Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI), Non-Invasive Break-Up Time (NI-BUT), Schirmer I Test, and Oxford Score. One-week OSDI was analyzed as the dependent variable using multivariable quantile regression (τ = 0.5), with baseline parameters (OSDI, Oxford score, Schirmer test, NI-BUT), age, BCVA, surgical technique, and cumulative dissipated energy (CDE) as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Surface and Contact Lens · Glaucoma and retinal disorders · Corneal surgery and disorders
