Eyeworld

APR 2022

EyeWorld is the official news magazine of the American Society of Cataract & Refractive Surgery.

Issue link: https://digital.eyeworld.org/i/1455075

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 48 of 114

46 | EYEWORLD | APRIL 2022 ANNUAL MEETING PREVIEW ASCRS NEWS Contact Hill: hill@doctor-hill.com About the physician Warren Hill, MD East Valley Ophthalmology Mesa, Arizona Relevant disclosures Hill: Haag-Streit by Ellen Stodola Editorial Co-Director Dr. Hill mentioned how much attention is paid in his practice to accuracy of IOL power se- lection. "Our half diopter accuracy is better than 90%," he said. It is possible to attain this level of accuracy, but it takes a lot of work. Dr. Hill added that when he talks to physicians around the world who have similar outcomes, they all note the importance of being meticulous, optimizing the ocular surface prior to biometry, validating every aspect of biometry, and refining outcomes based on past experience. The com- mon thread is the commitment to excellence, Dr. Hill said. He plans to go into detail on how to get to the highest possible accuracy because with IOLs like multifocal and torics, the highest possible level of accuracy is required. Panelists for the Lindstrom Symposium will include Dimitri Azar, MD, Reay Brown, MD, Clara Chan, MD, and Steven Dell, MD, with moderator Edward Holland, MD. Warren Hill, MD, to give Lindstrom Lecture W arren Hill, MD, will give the second Richard L. Lindstrom, MD, Lecture, presenting on the accuracy in IOL power selection and discussing "Are we there yet?" The inaugural Lindstrom Symposium and Lecture was held in 2021, with presentations on cataract, refractive, cornea, and glaucoma surgery, as well as industry collaboration. Dr. Hill spoke to EyeWorld about his upcom- ing lecture and some of the topics he plans to touch on, noting that he will likely give some historical perspective and look at where we are currently and what's on the horizon. Dr. Hill said there is much to discuss on the topic of IOL power selection in the short time of the lecture. "For a topic as large as this and as all-encompassing and important as what we do as anterior segment surgeons, that's not a lot of time," he said. As anterior segment surgeons, he continued, we are judged by our patients and peers by our refractive outcomes, so it's important. "Where we are right now in terms of accu- racy is very different than when I began my ca- reer in the mid-1980s," Dr. Hill said, adding that the landscape is even very different from several years ago. "I think most anterior segment sur- geons would agree that 5–10 years ago, it was a different ballgame for refractive outcomes. We now have much better tools to work with." Being able to consistently move past a 90% ±0.50 D accuracy is going to require a collec- tion of clear-thinking individuals coming up with new ideas, industry helping us with better and more sophisticated measurements, and all of that coming together in new solutions, he noted. "I think most anterior segment surgeons would agree that 5–10 years ago, it was a different ballgame for refractive outcomes. We now have much better tools to work with." —Warren Hill, MD

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Eyeworld - APR 2022