Contact Lens Prescribing Trends for Keratoconus at an Academic Medical Center: Increased Utilization of Scleral Lenses for Severe Disease

Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences (A.C.S., C.J., T.T.M., E.S.), University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL; and Reed Eye Associates (M.D.), Rochester Regional Health, Rochester, NY.

Address correspondence to Ellen Shorter, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1855 W. Taylor Street, Chicago, IL 60612; e-mail: [email protected]

The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Supported by a National Eye Institute Center Core Grant (P30 EY001792), National Institutes of Health/National Eye Institute under Grant K12 EY021475 (Scanzera), and an unrestricted grant to the University of Illinois at Chicago Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences from the Research to Prevent Blindness.

Presented as a poster “Management of Keratoconus over a Decade at a Tertiary Care Center” in October 10, 2020 at the American Academy of Optometry annual meeting, which was held virtually.

A. C. Scanzera: formal analysis, writing original draft, writing review and editing, and visualization presentation. M. Deeley: investigation, writing original draft, writing review, and editing. C. Joslin: conceptualization and methodology. T. T. McMahon: writing review and editing. E. Shorter: conceptualization, methodology, investigation, writing original draft, writing review and editing, and supervision.

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