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subject to legal complaint
LASER eye surgery, by
offering patients near-perfect sight in one
quick operation, has become a billion-pound
industry, using the latest technology to
generate vast profits.
From the biggest players such as Alcon, a £2
billion eyecare company, to the hundreds of
sought-after ophthalmologists, the stakes could
not be higher.
When a number of
doctors from across America began to question
whether Alcon’s Ladarvision system, a machine
using Nasa laser technology, was malfunctioning,
the company had two choices. It could have gone
public, and recalled the potentially defective
model or, like the three wise monkeys, it could
see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil.
According to lawsuits in the United States,
Alcon stands accused of adopting the second
position. When a group of eye surgeons
approached Tim Sear, the company’s chief
executive, in October 2002 to voice their
concerns, their unease was not put to rest.
In a transcript of the conference call, seen
by The Times, Herman Sloane, an eye
surgeon from Illinois, described how his lasers
had been “unbelievably good” at first, but had
begun to fluctuate badly. He said the number of
patients he was having to re-treat had
subsequently decreased, but he still “(got) a
surprise now and again”.
The doctors said that some had reported that
some of their patients had been left with
astigmatisms and suffered ghost images,
debilitating glare and blurred vision.
“As it sits right now, I am not comfortable .
. . I started with a laser that was nearly
perfect in my hands and I still haven’t
recovered to my baseline,” Dr Sloane said.
At the end of the conversation, Mr Sear, the
British former head of the Swiss-owned company,
based in Texas, thanked the doctors for raising
issues “which we take very seriously”.
Yet to date at least two of the doctors’
concerns remain unresolved and the company
continues to deny that machine malfunction has
ever been a legitimate problem. They say that
the complaints are being fabricated by doctors
and companies trying to avoid paying bills to
Alcon.
According to the US Food and Drug
Administration, the country’s regulatory body,
the manufacturers of medical equipment are
required to report any adverse effects that
occur “with unexpected severity or frequency”.
In court documents, EBW, the company that
used to lease the Ladarvision machine and which
is locked in litigation with Alcon over unpaid
bills, baldly alleges that the optical firm
repeatedly told individuals who reported a laser
problem that it was the first time they had
heard of it.
Alcon suggested instead that the doctors’
surgical skills or factors such as humidity were
at fault, it is alleged.
In papers responding to the EBW claims, Alcon
describes the charges as a “litany of unfounded
accusations”. It refers to the “loaded language
and invective” of the legal brief as “not a
substitute for the requirements imposed by law”.
Brian Will, a Canadian surgeon, makes similar
allegations to EBW about laser unpredictability
in documents that have been filed in Washington
State courts.
In January, Alcon won its suit against Dr
Will for breach of contract and for non-payment
of $1.6 million in fees.
The physician claims
that he defaulted on the payment after obtaining
leaked Alcon data showing high retreatment rates
in other clinics using Ladarvision lasers.
He is appealing in the
Court of Appeals of the State of Washington on
the ground that Alcon withheld relevant
documents.
While some doctors have
kept with Ladarvision systems, others — despite
Alcon’s assurances — still contend that little
or no action was taken and the £300,000 machines
continued to be linked to adverse events.
Sheri Rowen, an eye
surgeon in Baltimore, said that her laser had
also started to malfunction. She plans to launch
a lawsuit against Alcon early next month.
“I asked Alcon if other
doctors had experienced problems with their
lasers and their results and they told me no,
and they seemed to attribute my concerns to
everything but the laser itself,” she told The Times. “They also
told me that my laser was operating properly
when it wasn’t.”
Ms Rowen said that she
no longer used that model of the laser. “I
changed my laser technology — and I would never
be comfortable using the Ladarvision platform
again . . . There used to be three Ladarvision
in my city — now there are none. That says it
all.”
Although there are no
industry standards for rates of retreatment,
also known as “enhancements”, industry
literature cites a normal level of between 6 and
8 per cent of patients. According to leaked
Alcon data used in the EBW case, and seen by The Times, more than 40
per cent of patients at five clinics in the
United States had to return for further surgery
in 2002. A further 11 had rates over 30 per cent
and 39 clinics had rates over 20 per cent. A
spokesman for Alcon said that the data was a
financial document, and of “no clinical
relevance”.
In Britain, machines
used in Boots clinics had rates of around 10 per
cent at the end of 2002, double the number of
patients of 2001, the first year using the
system.
A spokeswoman for Boots
said that last year 8 per cent of patients had
retreatments, which were nearly all “tiny little
tweaks”. She added that 99 per cent received
6/12 vision — the equivalent of driving without
glasses — after one operation.
To date, Alcon
categorically denies that machine error could
have caused the reported problems with their
American models.
An Alcon spokesman said
that retreatment rates were not a good
indication of alleged machine fault. “If there
was a consistent problem, then all the systems
would have similar issues,” he said. He said
that it was never Alcon’s position to conceal
problems from doctors, adding that all lasers
had been passed by the FDA. “We are not going to
threaten our standing with the ophthalmic
community by hiding things from them.”
An FDA spokesman
declined to say if it was investigating the
safety of Ladarvision devices. He said that the
agency knew of allegations against Alcon, but
was “not aware” that Alcon has reported any
increase in retreatment rates.
Rebecca Petris, a
campaigner for greater eye surgery regulation
who runs the website LaserMyEye, said: “If the
only way to protect patients is by removing the
Ladarvision from service until this is
thoroughly investigated, then that should be
done.”
HOW VISION IS
IMPROVED
An operation known as
Lasik (Laser Assisted in-situ Keratmileusis) for
near-sightedness is the most common form of
laser eye surgery used in Britain. It costs
around £1,000 per eye
The patient is asked to
lie on a couch beneath the laser and is given
eyedrops that contain a local anaesthetic
A small device, known
as a speculum, is used to keep the eyes open and
the patient is asked to look up at a small,
blinking light
A suction ring is
placed on the eye to stabilise it. For the
minute or two that this is in place, the patient
is not able to see
An automated surgical
instrument containing a very fine blade is
fitted to the suction ring and passes over the
eye cutting a thin flap about a quarter of the
way into the cornea. This takes less than 20
seconds. The suction ring is then released and
the patient’s vision returns
The hinged flap of
cornea is then lifted to one side and the laser
begins to operate. When the correct amount of
cornea has been removed — after about 30 seconds
— the eye is washed to remove any particles that
may have landed on the exposed surface
The corneal flap is
then gently put back in position, where it
should settle firmly within five minutes
The patient should wear
clear lens glasses or sunglasses to protect the
eyes for two weeks, and eyedrops have to be
applied several times a day for a week
Most people will
experience some minor discomfort for 12 hours,
but within this time the eyesight should improve
rapidly and be adequate for work within four
days
There is often some
temporary “overcorrecting”, in which short sight
becomes long sight, but this will usually settle
down within a few weeks. The vast majority of
operations pass off with no ill-effects
Steven Trokel, a New
York City ophthalmologist, performed the first
laser surgery on a patient’s eyes in 1987
The first laser eye
treatment clinic using Dr Trokel’s laser was
founded by US-based investors in Toronto,
Canada, in 1989
The first British
clinic was opened at Clatterbridge hospital on
the Wirral in January 1991
Today, laser eye
surgery is a mainstream treatment used on around
100,000 people each year
Celebrities including
Cilla Black, the former Spice Girl Mel B, Nicole
Kidman and Brad Pitt have all had the operation
Complaints against
laser eye surgeons have increased by 166 per
cent in six years and account for a third of all
claims against opthalmic surgeons, according to
the Medical Defence Union, Britain’s largest
insurers of doctors