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Symfony Intraocular Lens Haloes Similar to Multifocals


Laird Harrison

May 09, 2017

LOS ANGELES Patients implanted with the Tecnis Symfony extended depth of focus intraocular lens (IOL) (Abbott
Medical Optics) may see haloes as troubling as those seen with multifocal IOLs, researchers say.

The new findings suggest the Symfony's advantages over older IOLs are less decisive than hoped.

Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in July 2015, the Symfony had reached the market earlier in many
other countries. Researchers from around the world presented their research on the lens here at the American Society of
Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) 2017 Annual Congress.

"One of the problems is that we've been anticipating the Symfony for so long in the [United States], that it's going to be a
cure-all, and it's not," said Steve J. Dell, MD, medical director at Dell Laser Consultants in Austin, Texas.

However, experts agreed that the Symfony adds to the options for patients with presbyopia, particularly those for whom
intermediate-range vision is paramount.

Standard monofocal IOLs provide clear vision only at one range. Multifocal IOLs are divided into sections that
simultaneously focus light differently for different ranges. The sections that are out of focus sometimes cause haloes.

The Symfony instead uses echelettes, a type of diffraction grating, to extend the IOL's focus range. At the same time, it
corrects chromatic aberration to enhance contrast. Previous studies had suggested that its halo and glare profile are
comparable to those of a monofocal IOL.

That has raised the possibility that the Symfony could offer the best of both worlds: good vision at multiple ranges without
haloes or glare.

But how does it compare to multifocal lenses in similar patients? Unable to find any head-to-head studies, Mary Attia, MD,
from the Heidelberg University Hospital in Germany, and colleagues analyzed three groups of patients: two using
multifocal lenses and one using the Symfony.

They implanted the bifocal AcrySof IQ ReStor SN6AD1 (Alcon) with a near addition of +3.0D in 40 eyes of 20 patients, the
trifocal FineVision (PhysIOL) with an intermediate addition of +1.75D and a near addition of +3.5D in 21 eyes of 11
patients, and the Symfony ZXR00 and toric ZXT models in 31 eyes of 16 patients.

All three IOLs are available in Europe. The Symfony was approved for sale there in June 2014. The ReStor +2.5 is
available in the United States, but the FineVision is not.

The patients receiving the FineVision had a median age of 66 years, those receiving the ReStor had a median age of 55.5
years, and those receiving the Symfony had a median age of 70 years.

All three performed well at long distances. The Symfony also excelled at a distance of 80 cm. But at 40 cm, the ReStor
SN6AD1 was the winner, with the Symfony a distant third.

On average, the recipients of the three types of lens gave them similar ratings for haloes, about in the middle of a 0 to 10
scale, where 10 is so bad patients would not consider driving. The differences among the three lenses for this measure
were not statistically significant (P > .05).

Table. Visual Acuity Compared


Median uncorrected Median uncorrected Median uncorrected Haloes (0 - 10
IOL distance visual acuity intermediate visual acuity near visual acuity at 40 scale of increasing
(logMAR) at 80 cm (logMAR) cm (logMAR) severity)
FineVision
0.02 0.04 0.07 5.10
(Trifocal)
ReStor SN6AD1
0.06 0.01 0.03 5.00
(Bifocal)
Symfony
(Extended Depth 0.04 0.08 0.14 6.35
of Focus)

There was a trend toward better glare ratings for the Symfony, but Dr Attia did not present calculations on statistical

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significance for this measure.

Patients implanted with the Symfony were more likely to report needing glasses for seeing at far distance than patients
implanted with either of the other types of lens, and more likely to report needing glasses for reading than the patients
implanted with the ReStor SN6AD1. Dr Attia did not provide statistical significance for this comparison, either.

Clinicians should talk to their patients about the pros and cons of each lens before implanting them, Dr Attia said. "It's
really according to the patients' lifestyle."

The Symfony might work best "for patients who care a lot about computer work, more than reading," she told Medscape
Medical News. "Patients who read a lot would need reading glasses anyway."

For occasional, brief reading tasks, all the IOLs in the study might work without reading glasses, she said. In contrast, "a
golf player would not be a good candidate for any of these lenses."

Patients may also benefit from combinations of multifocal IOLs, said Dr Dell, who reported favorable results in a study in
which 100 patients received the +2.75 D (ZKB00) Tecnis Multifocal 1-piece in their dominant eye and 75 patients received
the +3.25 D (ZLB00) and 25 received the +4.00 D (ZMB00) in the nondominant eye.

More recently, he has successfully tried blending the Symfony with other IOLs as well. "The dysphotopsias are different
and smaller, but they're not zero," he said.

In the discussion that followed these presentations, some experts said they preferred to aim for emmetropia with the
Symfony, and others for a slight plus correction.

"The main news is that there are a lot of excellent options," session panelist Phillip C. Hoopes Jr, MD, from Intermountain
Healthcare in Draper, Utah, told Medscape Medical News.

He agreed with Dr Attia that the Symfony adds to the options for patients who need good intermediate vision for computer
work.

Dr Dell reported financial interests in Abbott, Advanced Tear Diagnostics, Allergan, Bausch + Lomb, Lumenis, Optical
Express, Presbyopia Therapies, and Tracey Technologies. Dr Attia reported financial relationships through her institution
with Alcon, Alimera, AMO, Carl Zeiss Meditec, CIMA, Contamac, Hoya, HumanOptics, Kowa, Mediphacos, Novartis,
Oculentis, Ophtec, PowerVision, Rayner, and SIFI. Dr Hoopes reported relationships with AcuFocus, and SUN.

American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) 2017 Annual Congress. Presented May 8, 2017.

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Cite this article: Symfony Intraocular Lens Haloes Similar to Multifocals - Medscape - May 09, 2017.

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