4.5 Article

Lens thickness and associated ocular biometric factors among cataract patients in Shanghai

Journal

EYE AND VISION
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40662-021-00245-3

Keywords

Lens thickness; Cataract; Ocular biometry; Axial length

Categories

Funding

  1. Chinese National Natural Science Foundation (Beijing, China) [81970780, 81870642, 81670835]
  2. Shanghai Talent Development Fund (Shanghai, China) [201604]
  3. Outstanding Youth Medical Talents Program of Shanghai Health and Family Planning Commission (Shanghai, China) [2017YQ011]

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In a large Chinese cataractous population, the study found that thicker lens may be associated with older age, male gender, thicker CCT, shallower ACD, larger WTW, and flatter anterior corneal curvature. The change of LT was nonlinear as AL increased, with the thickest lens seen in the 20-22 mm AL group. The correlation between LT and other biometric factors remained significant even when stratified by ALs.
Background To evaluate the distribution of lens thickness (LT) and its associations with other ocular biometric factors among cataract patients in Shanghai. Methods Twenty-four thousand thirteen eyes from 24,013 cataract patients were retrospectively included. Ocular biometric factors including LT, central corneal thickness (CCT), anterior chamber depth (ACD), white-to-white (WTW) distance, anterior corneal curvature, and axial length (AL) were obtained using the IOLMaster700. The associations between LT and general or ocular factors were assessed. Results The mean age was 62.5 +/- 13.6 years and 56.1% were female. The mean LT was 4.51 +/- 0.46 mm. The LT was greater in older patients (P < 0.001). LT was positively correlated with CCT, while negatively correlated with ACD, WTW, and anterior corneal curvature (P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that increased LT was associated with older age, male gender, thicker CCT, shallower ACD, larger WTW, and flatter anterior corneal curvature (P < 0.001). LT changed with a variable behavior according to AL. In short eyes LT increased as AL increased, then decreased with longer AL in normal eyes and moderate myopic eyes, but increased again as AL increased in highly myopic eyes. Thickest LT was found in the 20.01-22 mm AL group. The correlation between LT and other biometric factors remained significant when stratified by ALs. Conclusions In a large Chinese cataractous population, we found that the thicker lens may be associated with older age, male gender, thicker CCT, shallower ACD, larger WTW, and flatter anterior corneal curvature. As AL increased, the change of LT was nonlinear, with the thickest lens seen in the 20-22 mm AL group.

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