Purpose:
To characterize angle kappa and study the relationship between preoperative angle kappa and postoperative refractive accuracy, visual outcomes, and patient satisfaction in a large population of eyes with multifocal intraocular lens (MIOL) implantation.
Methods:
A comprehensive electronic medical record chart review of 26,470 consecutive eyes that underwent immediate sequential bilateral cataract or refractive lens exchange with MIOLs was conducted. The primary outcome measures were postoperative monocular uncorrected distance visual acuity (UDVA), manifest refraction sphere and cylinder, spherical equivalent (SEQ), defocus equivalent (DEQ), subjective quality of vision at near, intermediate, and distance, and the likelihood of recommending the procedure. Relationships between preoperative angle kappa and postoperative outcomes were assessed with Pearson correlations.
Results:
Angle kappa followed a right-skewed normal distribution (
R
2
= 0.99) with a mean ± standard deviation of 0.64 ± 0.27 mm. No clinically meaningful relationship was found between preoperative angle kappa and postoperative sphere, cylinder, SEQ, and DEQ, all with
R
2
⩽ 0.0005. Similarly, there was no clinically meaningful relationship between preoperative angle kappa and postoperative UDVA (
R
2
= 0.001), postoperative satisfaction for near, intermediate, and distance vision (all
R
2
⩽ 0.0023), or for recommending the MIOL surgery to friends and relatives (
R
2
= 0.0000).
Conclusions:
Preoperative angle kappa does not have a predictive clinical impact on postoperative MIOL visual outcomes, refractive accuracy, or subjective patient satisfaction. Angle kappa as a single variable cannot be used to determine MIOL candidacy.
[
J Refract Surg
. 2023;39(12):840–849.]