To examine prospectively the efficacy and safety of photorefractive keratectomy and photoastigmatic refractive keratectomy.
Methods: We treated 645 eyes (440 patients) with a VisX Twenty/Twenty excimer laser and followed them up for 12 months.
Results: The percentage of eyes with myopia between -5.01 and -10.00 diopters spherical equivalent within 1 and 2 diopters of emmetropia at 12 months was 65% (123 of 189) and 90% (170 of 189), respectively, whereas the corresponding percentages for eyes with myopia greater than -10.00 diopters spherical equivalent were 39% (16 of 41) and 56% (23 of 41), and for eyes with myopia of -5.00 diopters spherical equivalent or less, 87% (238 of 273) and 99% (270 of 273), respectively. Uncorrected visual acuity of 20/20 and 20/40 or better at 12 months was attained in 47% (129 of 273) and 87% (237 of 273) of the eyes with myopia -5.00 diopters spherical equivalent or less, respectively. At 12 months, 48 (25%) of the 189 eyes with myopia between -5.01 and -10.00 diopters spherical equivalent had uncorrected visual acuity of 6/6 or better and 135 (71%), 6/12. At 12 months, one eye (2%) with myopia greater than -10.00 diopters spherical equivalent had uncorrected visual acuity of 6/6 and 11 (27%) of 41 eyes, 6/12. Ten (4%) of the 273 eyes with myopia of -5.00 diopters spherical equivalent or less, 15 (8%) of the 189 eyes with myopia between -5.01 and -10.00 diopters spherical equivalent, and nine (22%) of the 41 eyes with myopia greater than -10.00 diopters spherical equivalent had lost two or more LogMAR lines of best-corrected visual acuity at 12 months.
Conclusion: Excimer laser surgery is highly reliable for myopia of -5.00 diopters spherical equivalent or less and is less reliable for greater myopia.