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Femtosecond laser-assisted lamellar keratoplasty

Transplante lamelar auxiliado pelo laser de fentosegundo

Abstracts

Lamellar keratoplasty consists of transplanting partial-thickness donor cornea onto a complementary recipient bed. Manual lamellar dissection is technically very difficult, time-consuming, and imprecise. Also, the manually-dissected lamellar interface often has topographical irregularities that may optically degrade the best-corrected visual acuity. The femtosecond clinical laser (IntraLase FS LaserTM, Irvine, CA) is a recent innovation that can be programmed to produce bladeless, precise lamellar cuts at any depth with accompanying trephination cuts for both anterior and posterior lamellar transplantion. Posterior laser cuts may be used to assist in deep lamellar endothelial keratoplasty or Descemet's stripping automated endothelial keratoplasty.

Cornea; Corneal transplantation; Corneal transplantation; Laser therapy


A ceratoplastia lamelar consiste em transplante de espessura parcial da córnea doadora em um leito receptor complementar. A dissecção lamelar manual é técnica de difícil realização, imprecisa e que demanda tempo. Além disso, a interface lamelar freqüentemente apresenta irregularidade topográfica que pode comprometer a acuidade visual final. O laser clínico "femtosecond" (IntraLase FS LaserTM, Irvine, CA) é uma recente inovação que pode ser utilizado para produzir cortes lamelares precisos em qualquer profundidade da córnea, acompanhados de cortes verticais tanto para transplantes lamelares anteriores como posteriores sem a utilização de lâminas. Os cortes posteriores podem ser utilizados para a realização de ceratoplastia endotelial lamelar profunda ou ceratoplastia endotelial com remoção da membrana de Descemet.

Córnea; Transplante de córnea; Transplante de córnea; Terapia a laser


ATUALIZAÇÃO CONTINUADA

Femtosecond laser-assisted lamellar keratoplasty

Transplante lamelar auxiliado pelo laser de fentosegundo

Hunson Kaz SoongI; João Baptista Nigro Santiago MaltaII; Shahzad Ihsan MianIII; Tibor JuhaszIV

IProfessor of Ophthalmology - Division of Cornea, External Disease and Refractive Surgery - W.K. Kellogg Eye Center University of Michigan Medical School

IIResearch Fellow - Division of Cornea, External Disease and Refractive Surgery - W.K. Kellogg Eye Center University of Michigan Medical School - U.S.A.; Santa Casa de Misericórdia de São Paulo (SP) - Brazil

IIIAssistant Professor of Ophthalmology - Division of Cornea, External Disease and Refractive Surgery - W.K. Kellogg Eye Center University of Michigan Medical School

IVResearch Associate Professor, Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences Associate Professor, Biomedical Engineering, University of California - Irvine; Director of Research Intralase Corporation - Irvine

Endereço para correspondência Endereço para correspondência: João Malta W.K. Kellogg Eye Center - 1000 Wall Street Ann Arbor, MI - 48105, U.S.A. E-mail: jbmalta@umich.edu

ABSTRACT

Lamellar keratoplasty consists of transplanting partial-thickness donor cornea onto a complementary recipient bed. Manual lamellar dissection is technically very difficult, time-consuming, and imprecise. Also, the manually-dissected lamellar interface often has topographical irregularities that may optically degrade the best-corrected visual acuity. The femtosecond clinical laser (IntraLase FS LaserTM, Irvine, CA) is a recent innovation that can be programmed to produce bladeless, precise lamellar cuts at any depth with accompanying trephination cuts for both anterior and posterior lamellar transplantion. Posterior laser cuts may be used to assist in deep lamellar endothelial keratoplasty or Descemet's stripping automated endothelial keratoplasty.

Keywords: Cornea/cirurgia; Corneal transplantation/methods; Corneal transplantation/ instrumentation; Laser therapy/methods

RESUMO

A ceratoplastia lamelar consiste em transplante de espessura parcial da córnea doadora em um leito receptor complementar. A dissecção lamelar manual é técnica de difícil realização, imprecisa e que demanda tempo. Além disso, a interface lamelar freqüentemente apresenta irregularidade topográfica que pode comprometer a acuidade visual final. O laser clínico "femtosecond" (IntraLase FS LaserTM, Irvine, CA) é uma recente inovação que pode ser utilizado para produzir cortes lamelares precisos em qualquer profundidade da córnea, acompanhados de cortes verticais tanto para transplantes lamelares anteriores como posteriores sem a utilização de lâminas. Os cortes posteriores podem ser utilizados para a realização de ceratoplastia endotelial lamelar profunda ou ceratoplastia endotelial com remoção da membrana de Descemet.

Descritores: Córnea/cirurgia; Transplante de córnea/métodos; Transplante de córnea/instrumentação; Terapia a laser/métodos

INTRODUCTION

Penetrating keratoplasty (PKP) is the most common type of corneal transplant surgery currently performed. Although the final best-corrected visual acuity may be excellent after PKP, visual rehabilitation is often excruciatingly slow and frequently hampered by high and/or irregular astigmatism. The open-sky surgical exposure leaves very little protection should an expulsive choroidal hemorrhage occur intraoperatively. Postoperatively, even years after PKP, the full-thickness graft-host junction never heals to the original corneal strength. The large circumferential wound is thus an Achilles heel that is notoriously susceptible to traumatic dehiscence, often resulting in severe loss of vision.

Lamellar keratoplasty (LKP) consists of transplanting partial-thickness donor cornea onto a complementary recipient bed that has been dissected free of abnormal anterior or posterior stroma. Although the partial-thickness approach obviates many of the aforementioned complications of PKP, lamellar dissection remains technically demanding. With manual dissection, the lamellar interface often has clinically-significant topographical irregularities that optically degrade the best-corrected visual acuity by as much as one line on the Snellen chart(1). These are some of the factors that contribute to the relatively low popularity of lamellar transplantation. With recent improvements in technology, however, the technical ease and visual outcomes of LKP have improved substantially. This will undoubtedly lead to an increase in the frequency of lamellar transplantation.

Currently, anterior LKPs are done mostly for optical and tectonic purposes(2-3) in corneas with healthy endothelium. Specific optical indications for anterior LKPs include Reis-Bückler dystrophy of Bowman's layer, stromal dystrophies with predominantly anterior involvement, irregular anterior surface topography from disease or trauma, and occasionally keratoconus. Tectonic anterior LKPs are performed mainly for corneal ectasias, perforations, and descemetoceles, but may also be indicated for benign anterior corneal tumors and for pterygia covering the central visual axis.

In 1998, Melles et al. developed and refined the technique of posterior LKP, better known as deep lamellar endothelial keratoplasty or DLEK, as an alternative to PKP for corneal endothelial disease(4). In DLEK, a thin lamellar disc or button of posterior stroma, together with the endothelium, is replaced with a similar sized posterior lamellar disc from a donor cornea(5). Since then, several variants and refinements of this surgical technique have been reported(6-8). DLEK, like anterior LKP, avoids many of the pitfalls of full-thickness PKP, such as high refractive errors, irregular astigmatism, anisometropia, corneal suture problems, the dangerous open-sky surgical approach, and the risk of postoperative wound dehiscence. Unfortunately, manual posterior lamellar dissection is technically very difficult, time-consuming, and imprecise.

Several blade microkeratome-assisted DLEK techniques have been developed in an attempt to facilitate the posterior lamellar dissection and to improve the smoothness of the lamellar interface(9-11). The femtosecond clinical laser (IntraLase FS LaserTM, Irvine, CA)(12) is yet another innovation that can be programmed to produce bladeless corneal lamellar cuts at any depth with accompanying trephination cuts of desired diameters in both anterior LKP and posterior LKP. This laser may also be used for donor tissue cutting in Descemet's stripping automated endothelial keratoplasty (DSAEK), significantly reducing its technical difficulty and improving the cut precision(13-17).

Femtosecond laser background information

The femtosecond laser is a focusable, near-infrared (1053 nm) laser that generates ultrashort pulses in the femtosecond (10-15 second) range. This is similar to the more common Nd:YAG laser, which uses pulses in the nanosecond (10-9 second) duration range. When the pulse duration is shortened from the nanosecond to the femtosecond time domain, the energy required for producing tissue breakdown is also reduced. This, in turn, minimizes collateral tissue damage and inflammation(18-21), and thermal damage to the surrounding tissue is confined to less than 1 µm(22). Through a process known as photodisruption, the femtosecond laser vaporizes small volumes of tissue, generating a plasma of rapidly-expanding hot ionic gases. The resulting shock wave is followed by formation of a cavitation bubble (CO2 and H2O), which in the cornea, eventually escapes through the surrounding stromal tissue.

With precise computer-controlled laser energy, spot size, spot separation, and firing pattern, the IntraLase FS LaserTM is capable of cutting lamellar, axial, or pocket cuts at different desired depths and diameters in the cornea. The laser spots may be fired in an expanding spiral pattern or a zigzag (raster) pattern to achieve the lamellar incisions. Unlike lasers that employ visible wavelengths, the ability of the femtosecond laser to cut cornea is less affected by its cloudiness, making it ideal for treating edematous corneas. Currently, the FS-LaserTM is gaining popularity in the United States as a safer alternative to the mechanical microkeratome for creating LASIK flaps, and has been reported to produce good visual outcomes and a low flap-complication rate(12). In the FS LaserTM, the hinge option may be easily turned off in the software to create a controlled anterior free cap for anterior LKP or a circular posterior button for DLEK and DSAEK.

Femtosecond laser treatment of the cornea requires a low-suction (35 mmHg) applanating lens to immobilize the eye and to flatten the anterior cornea to allow treatment of a geometrically simple planar structure(23). Recently, a curved applanating lens is being investigated by IntraLase Corporation as an alternative to the planar lens.

Femtosecond laser-assisted anterior LKP

For anterior LKP, the FS LaserTM is programmed to produce anterior lamellar and trephination cuts at the desired depth and diameter. The standard applanating lens used to create LASIK flaps is also used in laser-assisted anterior LKP. Laser treatment begins with formation of the lamellar cut at a depth determined by the corneal opacities (Figures 1A and 2). The anterior trephination cut (6.0-8.0 mm diameter) is then performed by programming a circular pattern of contiguous laser spots to sequentially move anteriorly, starting at the plane of the lamellar interface and ending slightly anterior to the corneal epithelium. For most anterior LKPs, the energy setting for the lamellar interface and the trephination cuts are similar to those used in LASIK, i.e., 3.3 ± 0.1 µJ and 4.0 ± 0.1 µJ, respectively. Trephination requires slightly higher energy levels than lamellar incisions since the cuts are across, rather than along, the stromal fibers. The laser spot size is set for 2.0-2.4 µm and the pulse delivery rate is 30-60 kHz. For deeper anterior LKPs, the laser energy levels could be set higher and the spot separation closer in order to overcome laser scatter and attenuation caused by the additional thickness of stroma. The donor cornea (from either a whole globe or a corneoscleral button on an artificial anterior chamber) is treated in an identical fashion.



The anterior lamellar buttons are separated from the corneas in both the host and donor by sweeping the lamellar interface with a Barraquer iris sweep to break the remaining bridges of uncut stroma. The donor anterior lamellar corneal button is transferred into the host lamellar bed and sutured with either interrupted or running 10-0 nylon sutures.

The femtosecond laser is also currently being used in anterior LKP to prepare both donor button and recipient corneal bed in "all-laser" sutureless lamellar keratoplasty (ALSL-LK)(24). In this procedure, the edges of the lamellar wound are welded with diode-laser-induced adhesion, thus obviating conventional sutures.

Femtosecond laser-assisted DLEK and DSAEK

Femtosecond laser-assisted DLEK techniques (Figure 1B) and results in human eye bank eyes have been reported(17,25-27). The laser treatment sequence for DLEK and DSAEK is programmed in the reverse of anterior LKP; namely, the trephination cut precedes more anterior lamellar treatment. This avoids the lamellar treatment cavitation bubbles from blocking laser energy to the subsequent posterior trephination. A custom-made short applanating lens must be used instead of the standard applanating lens that is designed to create LASIK flaps and anterior LKP buttons. The shorter focal length allows the laser to be focused at a deeper planes than in LASIK and anterior LKP. The laser spot size is set to 2.4 µm and the laser pulse delivery rate is 30-60 kHz.

In DLEK the posterior trephination (6.0-8.0 mm diameter) begins in the anterior chamber and progressively moves anteriorly through endothelium, Descemet's membrane, and posterior stroma. To assure complete cuts deep inside edematous corneas, higher trephination energy levels (8.7 ± 0.1 µJ) than in anterior LKP may be used. The lamellar plane is then cut at about 150 to 200 µm anterior to the endothelial surface (Figure 3A), using a slightly lower energy (7.4 ± 0.1 µJ) than the trephination cut. The donor corneal button in both DLEK and DSAEK is cut from either a whole globe or a corneoscleral button on an artificial anterior chamber. The diameter of the lamellar dissection is intentionally made 1.0 to 2.0 mm larger than the trephination diameter (Figure 3A), in order to ensure that these two cuts meet. This allows the cavitation bubbles to escape into the anterior chamber and the posterior disc to be easily separated from the peripheral edges. Also, a lamellar side pocket (Figure 3A) created by this oversizing allows the peripheral edges of the donor disc to be tucked securely into the recipient bed in DLEK.



The lamellar interface is entered from the anterior surface of either cornea or sclera via either a 4 mm-wide freehand tunnel incision or a similar laser-cut tunnel incision. The stromal bridges in the lamellar interface are easily swept apart with a Barraquer iris sweep and the posterior corneal button is removed through the tunnel incision with Utrata capsulorrhexis forceps.

In DLEK and DSAEK, the donor button is folded taco-style with the endothelial side in, protected by a layer of viscoelastic material, and inserted through the tunnel incision into the anterior chamber with Utrata forceps. The graft button is unfolded in the anterior chamber after carefully ascertaining correct orientation of the endothelial face. Viscoelastic material in the anterior chamber is exchanged with balanced-salt solution and an air bubble is injected into the anterior chamber to pneumatically tamponade the donor disc into place. The small tunnel incision may be sutured if desired. Light-microscopic histologic studies of the laser-cut corneas show smooth lamellar stromal cuts with straight trephination edges (Figure 3B). Scanning electron microscopic studies show a mild stucco-like texture of the lamellar surface and a crisp trephination edge (Figure 3C). This mild stucco texture may actual aid in adhesion of the button in DLEK and DSAEK. Clinical slit-lamp examination in a live rabbit at one month and six months postoperatively shows a clear and compact central cornea with the posterior graft in excellent position, ringed by haze in the surrounding recipient cornea (Figure 4)(28).


CONCLUSIONS

The bladeless femtosecond laser-assisted anterior LKP, posterior LKP, and DSAEK offer an exciting alternative to their manual and microkeratome-assisted counterparts. Femtosecond laser-assisted anterior LKP has already been performed in humans with good visual outcomes (IntraLase Corporation internal memorandum; Lee Nordan, M.D.), whereas the femtosecond-assisted DLEK technique requires further laboratory refinement and investigation before human clinical trials are conducted. The femtosecond laser is also currently being used at some centers in the cutting of the donor posterior corneal buttons in DSAEK surgery(15,29) and for trephining complex, interlocking cuts in full-thickness PKP (personal communication: Roger Steirnert, MD and Francis Price, MD).

Recebido para publicação em 26.08.2007

Última versão recebida em 10.04.2008

Aprovação em 14.04.2008

Trabalho realizado na University of Michigan/Kellogg Eye Center.

Dr. Juhasz has financial interest in Intralase Corporation. W.K. Kellogg Eye Center, University of Michigan Medical School.

Nota Editorial: Depois de concluída a análise do artigo sob sigilo editorial e com a anuência da Dra. Marta Beatriz Fillipi Sartori sobre a divulgação de seu nome como revisora, agradecemos sua participação neste processo.

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  • Endereço para correspondência:
    João Malta
    W.K. Kellogg Eye Center - 1000 Wall Street
    Ann Arbor, MI - 48105, U.S.A.
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      03 Sept 2008
    • Date of issue
      Aug 2008

    History

    • Accepted
      14 Apr 2008
    • Received
      26 Aug 2007
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