Press Releases

EssilorLuxottica Unveils Four-Year Clinical Trial Results of Its Essilor Stellest Lens at the 2023 Annual Meeting of the ARVO

(PRESS RELEASE) CHARENTON-LE-PONT, FRANCE — EssilorLuxottica presented the four-year clinical trial results of its myopia control innovation Essilor Stellest lens for the first time at the 2023 ARVO annual meeting in New Orleans United States. The findings show that Essilor Stellest lenses continue to exhibit strong efficacy in slowing myopia progression and axial eye elongation in children in the fourth year.

The clinical trial which began in 2018 was conducted at the Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University in Wenzhou, China. The study assessed the four-year increase of myopia and axial eye length of children who wore spectacle lenses with highly aspherical lenslets (HAL). Essilor Stellest lenses are based on the optical design of HAL lenses. The key findings from the study include:

  • HAL lenses saved more than one and a quarter dioptres of myopia on average over four years, demonstrating conclusive evidence of their effectiveness in slowing down myopia progression in children in the fourth year.
  • Myopia progression and axial eye elongation in children wearing HAL lenses was slower compared to a modeled control single vision lens group1, again indicating sustained myopia control efficacy of the lenses in the fourth year.
  • HAL lenses remain effective in slowing myopia progression and axial eye elongation in older children (11-16 y.o.) in the fourth year.

The four-year results were presented by Dr. Björn Drobe from EssilorLuxottica’s R&D team. Dr. Yee Ling Wong from the R&D team presented findings from a study that evaluated the eye growth of children wearing spectacle lenses with aspherical lenslets and with single-vision lenses in comparison to eye growth patterns in non-myopic children in Wenzhou, China. These findings concluded that the eye growth pattern in 9 out of 10 children wearing HAL lenses full-time was similar or slower than that of non-myopic children, after two years.

The release of the four-year data follows the recent publication of the three-year clinical trial findings in the medical journal American Journal of Ophthalmology, which also highlights evidence of continued myopia control efficacy of the lens in slowing down myopia progression in children over three years. When children switched to HAL lenses in the third year after two years of wearing single vision lenses, myopia progression and axial eye elongation decreased significantly, compared to children wearing single vision lenses. The link to the article can be found here.

Norbert Gorny, co-chief operating officer at EssilorLuxottica, said, “We are proud to share the latest findings from our four-year study of the Essilor Stellest lens at ARVO, which demonstrate that the myopia control effect of the lens is sustainable over four years. We look forward to sharing additional data with the scientific community. Such encouraging, evidence-based findings will significantly help to enhance scientific understanding and clinical interest for myopia control solutions like the Essilor Stellest lens globally. To move the needle further, we will continue to advance myopia research, deliver innovative solutions, build partnerships to strengthen awareness and education, share insights and expertise at key conferences, and much more.”

Press Releases

Recent Posts

Economy Is Slowing but Remains Resilient

Prices for services still rising, while goods level off: NRF economist.

2 days ago

The Pros and Cons of Virtual Assistants and More of Your Questions Answered

Plus, what’s the secret to an employee review that’s actually effective?

2 days ago

Mastering Sales & Style: 6 Lessons Learned from TV

Art may imitate life but that doesn’t mean it still can’t teach us a few…

2 days ago

A 30-Year Optical Veteran Who Grew Up Within 30 Miles of the Community She Serves With 3 Generations of Women

And little gets this 30-year cancer survivor down but cleaning the 1,500 frames on their…

3 days ago

87% of You Don’t Use Employment Contracts

Often citing the employee handbook is enough. Guess our next question will be “Do You…

3 days ago

This website uses cookies.