Welcome to the RxSight Ed Light Adjustable Learnings hub, a resource intended to help doctors and practice leaders introduce and integrate the Light Adjustable Lens™ (LAL®/LAL+®) into clinical practice. Learn essential planning and strategy pearls directly from colleagues who have implemented the Light Adjustable Lens into their practices successfully. This video library also provides real-life insights into surgery and implantation of the Light Adjustable Lens and practical advice on expanding the premium channel within your practice. New content will be routinely updated, so please check back regularly. Click on a video below or select a topic to get started.
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For clinical study data, please see the FDA Summary of Safety and Effectiveness.
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The Light Adjustable Lens provides optimized vision for patient satisfaction.2
Light Adjustable Lens patients saw nearly as well without glasses (UCDVA) as control patients did with glasses (BCDVA).
Since the Light Adjustable Lens is a monofocal lens, there is low risk of dysphotopsias caused by splitting light, leading to potentially enhanced vision and patient satisfaction.
The Light Adjustable Lens offers LASIK-like accuracy in cataract surgery.2,3
92% of eyes (N = 391) achieved results within 0.50 D of target manifest refraction spherical equivalent (MRSE).
Patients are approximately two times more likely to achieve 20/20 vision or better without glasses at 6 months.
The study was a prospective, controlled, multicenter, 12-month study of 600 patients (ITT population) randomized to receive implantation with the RxSight LAL (N = 403) or a commercially available monofocal IOL (N = 197). Effectiveness analyses included 391 LAL patients and 193 control patients. Primary safety variables included best spectacle-corrected visual acuity (BSCVA) at 6 months and incidence of sight-threatening complications and adverse events. Primary effectiveness variables included percent reduction in manifest cylinder at 6 months, percent mean absolute reduction in MRSE at 6 months, and rotation of meridian of LAL at 6 months. Percent of eyes with an uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA) of 20/20 or better at six months post-operatively compared between the LAL treatment group and the monofocal control group was a secondary endpoint.
The Light Adjustable Lens corrects as low as 0.50 D of astigmatism, which is the lowest level approved to be treated.