Abstract
PURPOSE: This study aimed to investigate the influence of preoperative angle kappa on postoperative effective optical zone (EOZ) in KLEx patients with intraoperative angle kappa adjustment. METHODS: This retrospective study included 174 eyes from 89 myopic patients who underwent the KLEx procedure with intraoperative angle kappa adjustments. Preoperative angle kappa (µ) was approximated as the chord distance between the pupil center and corneal vertex. The cohort was divided into two groups: large angle kappa (µ > 0.2 mm, n = 84) and small angle kappa (µ ≤ 0.2 mm, n = 90). EOZ parameters, including EOZ reduction ratio (RR=EOZ/planned optical zone, %), major and minor axis, decentration, and eccentricity, were measured at one month postoperatively. Linear regression analyses were performed to assess the relationships between preoperative angle kappa and postoperative EOZ parameters. RESULTS: Postoperatively, RR, major and minor axis, decentration and eccentricity did not differ significantly between groups. Univariate linear regression revealed significant but modest negative correlation of angle kappa with RR and minor axis (adjusted R² = 0.05 and 0.03; P = 0.003 and 0.02, respectively). Further, multivariate regression incorporating preoperative spherical equivalent demonstrated that angle kappa was not a significant predictor of EOZ parameters. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, our study showed that preoperative angle kappa had minimal effect on EOZ parameters in KLEx surgery when appropriate intraoperative adjustments for angle kappa were implemented.