Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate corneal stiffening after epithelium-off accelerated corneal cross-linking (CXL; 9 mW/cm²) in progressive keratoconus (KC) with different methods of epithelial debridement.
Methods: This was a retrospective, interventional, and non-randomized study. In group 1, the epithelium was removed using a hockey knife (N = 45). In group 2 (N = 39) and group 3 (N = 22), the epithelial thickness was measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT) and the epithelium was ablated by excimer laser, but, in group 3, stromal ablation was performed additionally to correct high order aberrations (HOAs). Corneal biomechanics (integrated invers radius [IIR], stress-strain index [SSI]) and corneal tomography (thinnest corneal thickness [TCT]) were assessed with Corvis ST and Pentacam prior to and 1 month after CXL.
Results: Corneal tomography did not differ among the groups preoperatively (P > 0.05). TCT decreased significantly in all groups after surgery (all P < 0.05). Nonetheless, corneal biomechanical stiffening was found in all three groups indicated by a decreased IIR and an increased SSI (all P < 0.05). For group 3, the HOA improved significantly (P < 0.001). Among the groups, there were no significant differences in changes of biomechanical parameters, but TCT was significantly reduced after laser ablation.
Conclusions: Corneal stiffening after CXL is independent from epithelial removal. In particular, despite the removal of stromal tissue to correct HOA, a stiffening effect was achieved in keratoconic corneas, even it was less pronounced compared to mechanical epithelial removal. The reduction in HOA indicates a possible improvement in visual acuity.
Translation relevance: Cross-linking stiffens the keratoconus independent of epithelial debridement technique and may compensate minor stromal laser ablation.