At present, the clinical evaluation of laser capsulotomy indications is still mainly based on slit lamp examination and the degree of visual impairment [10]. Nowadays, visual impairment defined by VA alone is not enough to reflect the subjective disability [27]. The slit lamp evaluation method depends more on the clinical experience of the examiner, which is easy to cause bias. In this study, the logMAR CDVA of 39% of the studied eyes was less than or equal to 0.1 before surgery. For these patients, precapsulotomy corrected visual acuity remained at a very good level; doctors tended to ignore the effect of PCO on the visual function of these patients. Therefore, it is still a difficult problem for clinicians to comprehensively evaluate the damage of PCO on the visual function of these patients and the choice of operation time. In this study, PCO severity, CDVA, objective visual function index OSI and subjective visual quality index VF-14 score were used to evaluate PCO, and the effectiveness of various methods was discussed. This study found that OSI is a good objective index for evaluating visual function changes caused by PCO. The high correlation between OSI and subjective visual quality index VF-14 was reported for the first time. The combination of OSI and subjective visual quality index VF-14 can effectively guide surgical decision-making for early PCO.
This study found that in patients with good baseline vision, a single VA was not enough to reflect PCO’s impairment on the visual quality of patients. Because some PCO patients reported obvious visual interference, but not accompanied by a decline in VA, the surgical decision-making of these patients is more complicated, so this study divided the patients into logMAR CDVA > 0.1 group and logMAR CDVA ≤ 0.1 group according to the precapsulotomy VA of PCO patients. This study found that precapsulotomy VA was highly correlated with objective visual quality index (OSI), subjective visual quality index (VF-14), and EPCO score in patients with apparent visual impairment preoperatively. In contrast, in patients with light visual impairment, VA has a low correlation with OSI, VF-14 and EPCO score. Nowadays, acuity is associated with the quality of daily life. However, it has been suggested that other parameters, such as stereopsis, visual field or contrast sensitivity, are more critical than acuity for functional tasks, especially since many cataract patients have relatively good acuity at baseline [28]. Previous research shows that VA is limited as a predictor of satisfaction with vision and of visual function (using the VF-14) [29, 30]. Van Bree MC et al. also found that the relation between PCO severity and logMAR is curvilinear, so the functional visual effect of slight PCO cannot be objectified by CDVA testing [31].
The main finding of this study for ophthalmic practice is that OSI can be used as a meaningful indicator of the capsulotomy.
Zhang H et al. reported that the presence of PCO reduced the patient’s visual quality and was manifested as an increase in image scattering index in the double-pass system [32]; there was a close correlation between the decline of VA and the increase of OSI [32], while van Bree MC et al. reported the relation between VA and stray light was limited in PCO [31]. This study demonstrated a good correlation between CDVA and OSI in patients with seriously visual impairment induced by PCO, but the correlation between CDVA and OSI was lower in patients with better baseline visual acuity. Because distinct optical processes cause stray light and VA impairment. Only when these two optical processes are damaged at the same time, VA and stray light may change simultaneously.
Light-scatter is more sensitive to slight PCO than contrast sensitivity and visual acuity[33]. The relation between PCO severity and straylight is linear [31], the OSI was also correlated with objective lens nuclear density in eyes with age-related nuclear cataract [15]. Nuclear, cortical, and posterior subcapsular cataracts led to a decrease in vision and an increase in the OSI [34]. Our study also found that OSI was highly positively correlated with PCO severity in all patients, and higher than the correlation between CDVA and PCO severity. The visual acuity of patients with light PCO is normal, but OSI has increased, and VF-14 score has begun to decline, which indicates that OSI reflects the changes of visual function caused by PCO earlier and more sensitive than vision. The influence of PCO position and shape on visual function has reached a basic consensus [31, 35]. In early PCO, the light intensity is slightly reduced due to slight opacity and incomplete occlusion of the optic axis, so the visual acuity remains unchanged. However, the uneven posterior capsular opacity causes light scattering in the eyes, which leads to an increase of OSI. In fibrotic PCO, turbid cells mainly originate from cubic epithelial cells of the anterior capsule. The slender white linear fibroid changes mostly begin at the edge of the IOL, which mainly causes the slight folding and thickening of the posterior capsule [36, 37]. Therefore, early fibrotic PCO only slightly reduces the illumination, which has a slight effect on central vision, but the scattering of light in the thickened area of posterior capsule fold results in the glare; as a consequence, fibrosis-type PCO may affect stray light to a larger extent than VA [37]. In Elschnig’s pearls, the enlarged cystic cells of pearl turbidity originate from the equatorial epithelial cells, which proliferate actively and migrate to the entire posterior capsule surface [38]. Elschnig’s pearl bodies act as refractors to scatter light into the eyes, so the increase of OSI is more obvious. The correspondence between OSI and PCO severity suggests the applicability of using these objective parameters to assess the severity of PCO and to make decisions about surgery.
We firstly proved the high correlation between OSI and VF-14 score in PCO. In the research, 39%(41 /105)eyes have good CDVA, but the subjective visual disturbance is noticeable. To complement objective VA information, it is now accepted that evaluating the impact of a disease on quality of life using a patient-reported outcome is important for medical interventions, therapeutic decisions, or outcomes research. De Juan-Marcos et al. found that the VF-14 scores of patients correlate more strongly with their satisfaction with vision than VA, and VF-14 is more sensitive to functional disability caused by PCO and to capsulotomy improvements, however, improvement in VA is slightly correlated with gains in quality of life [5]. In our current study, regardless of baseline vision, the correspondence between OSI and VF-14 score is very high, while in patients with better baseline vision, the correlation between CDVA and VF-14 is poor. Many studies indicated that OSI could quantitatively measure the intraocular scattering, which could be used as an objective index to reflect optical performance [39, 40]. The double-pass image was affected by both the forward and the backward scattering, produced in the first and the second pass of the light through the lens, the analysis of the energy distribution on this image revealed the contribution of the light scattering which really impaired visual performance [39]. The good consistency between the objective visual function index OSI and the subjective visual function index VF-14 score suggested that OSI can objectively verify the visual interference caused by PCO in patients. OSI is of great significance in early surgical decision-making of PCO, serving as an indicator for capsulotomy referral, distinguishing between early, beneficial capsulotomy and early, unbeneficial capsulotomy.
Nd: YAG laser capsulotomy is accepted as the standard treatment for PCO and has been found to be safe and effective [10]. Improvement in visual acuity after Nd: YAG laser capsulotomy in patients with significant PCO has been well documented [10, 41]. Improvements in glare and contrast sensitivity may also be an important outcome for many patients [10, 42]. In our study, all patients had OSI values greater than or equal to 3, regardless of the baseline VA. In the sixty-four eyes suffered from obvious visual impairment caused by PCO, the visual acuity and various visual function indexes improved significantly after the operation. In the 41 eyes with good baseline VA, even though the CDVA did not have obvious improvement, all the other visual function parameters (OSI, VF-14 score, SR, MTF-cut off, PVA 100%, PVA 20%, PVA9% ) were significantly improved. These results indicated that in the early stage of PCO, because of the uneven posterior capsular opacity, light can still pass through the gap of opacity, visual impairment is not apparent. However, light sacttering has increased significantly, and the visual function has been affected. OSI is more sensitive than VA in evaluating the visual function. OSI can quantify the intraocular scattering caused by PCO. It is an objective and effective PCO evaluation method. Especially in the early stage of PCO, OSI can confirm the subjective symptoms of PCO patients and guide the timing of surgical intervention. In previous studies, Artal et al. proposed an OSI-based cataract classification method: OSI less than 1.0 is the normal eye, 1.0 to 3.0 corresponds to early cataract, 3.0 to 7.0 corresponds to advanced cataract, and 7.0 corresponds to mature cataract [39], and OSI ≥ 3 can be used as a reference for cataract surgery. In our study, OSI ≥ 3 in all patients before the capsulotomy and visual function parameters were significantly improved after surgery, which suggested that OSI ≥ 3 for cataract surgery can also be used for laser capsulotomy.
The double-pass system has recently been applied to objectively evaluate crystalline lens opacity[22, 23, 39]. Because ocular scatter increases under cataract conditions, the measurement of scatter is a good tool for evaluating cataracts. The OSI can be useful parameters to discriminate objectively clear crystalline lens from cataract and beneficial in the decision-making process, particularly in patients with minimal visual acuity loss yet symptomatic cataract[23]. The OSI also has a good objective evaluation of posterior capsule opacification[32]. In this study, we found according to the ROC curve analysis, in the precapsulotomy logMAR CDVA > 0.1 group, the AUC of the OSI was 0.996 (P = 0.000). In the precapsulotomy logMAR CDVA ≤ 0.1 group, the AUC of the OSI was 0.943 (P = 0.000), suggesting that the OSI had high sensitivity and accuracy of PCO diagnosis. Thus, the OSI is a useful test for decision-making in PCO surgery. The OQAS provide good repeatability and reproducibility of subjective measurement of intraocular scattering in healthy subjects[20, 43, 44]. The measurements of optical quality and intraocular scattering in children by the double-pass system also showed good intro- and intersession repeatability[13]. The repeatability of OQAS-II is good in measuring the visual quality of normal as well as forme fruste keratoconus[45]. Thus, the OSI can quantitatively analyze the extent of PCO and has the characteristics of high accuracy, simple operation, and excellent clinical application.
In this study, only aspherical monofocal IOL was involved. Some recent studies reported that significantly higher values of OSI and lower values of MTF cutoff and SR were found in the multifocal phakic eyes than monofocal IOL eyes and normal elder[46, 47]. The diffractive or refractive rings in the optics of multifocal IOLs may be partially responsible for causing scatter, resulting in moderate glare[46]. Thus, assessing the decision of laser capsulotomy after multifocal IOL implantation may require more other parameters.