Extended-Wear
Contact Lenses aren't capturing the market;
Despite convenience, less than eight percent
of Contact Lens Prescriptions are Extended
Wear
Newswise, February 5, 2012--After more than
a decade on the market, extended-wear (EW)
contact lenses still haven't caught on among
patients and eye care professionals, reports
the February issue of Optometry
and Vision Science, official
journal of the American
Academy of Optometry. The journal
is published by Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins , a part of Wolters
Kluwer Health.
Despite their advantages, EW contact
lenses—which can be worn continuously for up
to a month— account for less than eight
percent of contact lens prescriptions. The
study was based on an analysis of worldwide
prescribing data, led by Nathan Efron,
BScOptom, PhD, DSc, of Queensland University
of Technology, Australia.
Worldwide Data Show Stalled Growth in EW
Lens Prescribing
The researchers analyzed 14 years of data
(1997 through 2010) on contact lens fittings
by eye care professionals in 39 countries.
They analyzed trends in EW contact lens
prescribing, including patient and
characteristics and fitting patterns.
Extended-wear contact lenses made of an
oxygen-permeable silicone hydrogel material
first came on the market in the late 1990s.
Modern EW lenses are designed to be left in
the eye day and night for up to a month,
without the need for daily removal and
cleaning.
The data suggested that use of EW lenses
peaked in 2006, when they accounted for 12
percent of all soft contact lens
prescriptions.
However, the rate decreased in more recent
years, falling to 7.8 percent in 2010. The
rate varied between countries, ranging up to
27 percent in Norway..
Certain groups of patients were more likely
to receive EW lenses, including men, older
patients, and those not receiving their
first contact lens prescription ("refits").
Efron and coauthors speculate that EW lenses
are more likely to be prescribed for older
patients who are experienced with contact
lenses—and perhaps better able to afford the
higher cost of EW lenses. Some men may
prefer EW lenses because of their
convenience for sports participation.
Most patients with EW lenses used some form
of lens care solution. That suggested that
they remove and store their lenses at least
occasionally, rather than wearing them full
time for the entire month.
Nearly 30 percent of EW lens prescriptions
were for conventional hydrogel
lenses—possibly because they are less
expensive than newer silicone hydrogel
lenses designed specifically for 30-day
extended wear.
Safety Concerns Are Key Issuee
"Despite the obvious benefits of lifestyle
convenience" associated with EW lenses, "it
seems that practitioners still prefer to
prescribe, and patients prefer to wear,
contact lenses for daily wear," Dr Efron and
coauthors write.
The drop in EW lens prescriptions during the
mid-2000s may partly reflect the
introduction of silicone hydrogel lenses
designed for daily use.
But safety concerns are probably the key
factor behind the limited acceptance of EW
lenses, Dr Efron and colleagues believe.
The first EW lenses introduced to the market
were associated with high complication
rates. The problems were mostly eliminated
by the current generation of
oxygen-permeable silicone hydrogel lenses.
The rate of severe keratitis with modern EW
lenses is low, around 20 cases per 10,000
lens wearers per year. However, that's
higher than the 4 per 10,000 annual rate for
daily contact lens wearers.
Dr. Efron and coauthors conclude, "EW
prescribing…is unlikely to become a
mainstream lens wearing modality until the
already low risks of ocular complications
can be reduced to be equivalent to that for
daily wear."