This year’s Australasian Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (AUSCRS) meeting was held in Noosa, Queensland from October 17-20.
It was the most successful and well attended in the 22-year history of AUSCRS. Over 400 registered, including doctors, technical and administration staff and industry representatives. There was also a reasonable attendance from New Zealanders this year, although there were far more South Islanders than North Islanders again. The exception to this was Dr Dean Corbett who has become a regular, major contributor to our only major local cataract and refractive surgery meeting of the year. The high numbers this year appeared to be bolstered by an increase in the number of younger ophthalmologists and trainees attending. This year, we also had the highest number of invited overseas speakers to date.
This overall theme of this year’s meeting was Ride the Wave, in keeping with the location. Every session also had its own individual and unique theme, with presenters dressed by AUSCRS organisers in different costumes appropriate to the theme of their session.
Monofocal vs multifocal IOLs
One of the highlights of AUSCRS is the Gold Medal Lecture and this year’s lecturer was Professor Thomas Kohnen, Department of Ophthalmology chair at Goethe University in Frankfurt. He gave an excellent talk on Presbyopia Correcting IOLs: Current Options and Solutions to Problems, beginning with a discussion on the published results of monovision with monofocal IOLs. He defined the current approach to monovision as targeting a refraction of between -1.00D and -1.50D in the near vision eye, referencing AUSCRS president Professor Graham Barrett’s paper that showed about one quarter achieved spectacle independence. Kohnen also discussed accommodating IOLs and said no currently available accommodative IOL has proved accommodative ability and that not everyone who reads with an accommodating IOL accommodates.









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