Changes in Forward and Backward Light Scatter in Keratoconus Resulting From Corneal Cross-Linking

Asia Pac J Ophthalmol (Phila). 2013 Jan-Feb;2(1):15-9. doi: 10.1097/APO.0b013e3182729df0.

Abstract

Purpose: To study the forward and backward light scatter in keratoconic corneas before and after cross-linking.

Design: An institutional, prospective, cross-sectional study was conducted.

Methods: This study includes 35 eyes of 25 patients with keratoconus scheduled for either standard corneal collagen cross-linking with riboflavin (CXL) or transepithelial corneal cross-linking (TE-CXL). A group of 26 healthy myopic eyes from 26 prerefractive patients was included as normal reference. Before and 6 months after cross-linking, forward light scatter was measured using the compensation comparison method, whereas backward light scatter was measured using Scheimpflug imaging.

Results: In keratoconic eyes, backward light scatter originating from the corneal stroma was [mean (SD)] 27.2% (8.2%) higher than in the normal eyes (P < 0.001). In the anterior stroma, this increased backscatter was significantly correlated with the maximum corneal curvature Kmax as a measure of keratoconus severity (Pearson ρ = 0.582, P = 0.003). For forward light scatter, no significant difference was seen between the normal and keratoconus groups, nor was there any correlation with keratoconus severity. After CXL, the backscatter increased significantly by [mean (SD)] 33.0% (9.5%) in the entire corneal stroma (P = 0.001), whereas for TE-CXL, no significant increase was seen. Forward scatter increased significantly by [mean (SD)] 0.10 (0.10) log units (P = 0.009) and 0.09 (0.10) log units (P = 0.003) for CXL and TE-CXL, respectively, which is near the detection limit for an average patient.

Conclusions: Unlike TE-CXL, CXL increases the already-elevated stromal backscatter in keratoconus. Forward scatter increases equally for both techniques.