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PurposeThis study assessed the readability, reliability and accuracy of patient information leaflets on Descemet Membrane Endothelial Keratoplasty (DMEK), generated by seven large language models (LLMs). The aim was to determine which LLM produced the most patient-friendly, comprehensible and evidence-based leaflet, measured against a leaflet written by clinicians from a tertiary centre.MethodsEach LLM was given the prompt, "Make a patient information leaflet on Descemet Membrane Endothelial Keratoplasty (DMEK) surgery." Readability metrics (FKG, FRE, ARI, Gunning Fog), reliability metrics (DISCERN, PEMAT), misinformation detection and reference analysis were recorded for each response. A weighted scoring system normalised results on a 0-100% scale.ResultsThe clinician-generated leaflet scored the highest (92%). Claude 3.7 Sonnet had the top LLM score (77.8%), with strong readability and referencing. ChatGPT-4o followed closely (70.9%) but lacked references. Moderate scores for DeepSeek-V3, Perplexity AI and Google Gemini 2.0 Flash. ChatGPT-4 and Microsoft CoPilot scored the lowest due to limited reliability and misinformation.ConclusionsLLMs show promise in generating patient education material but vary in reliability and accuracy. Claude 3.7 Sonnet was the best performing LLM, though none matched in quality to the clinician-generated leaflet. LLM-generated leaflets therefore require clinician oversight before safe clinical use.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11206721251367562 | DOI Listing |
Cell Tissue Bank
September 2025
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
To summarize the evidence examining the outcomes of Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) using eye bank pre-stripped versus surgeon prepared grafts. Systematic review and meta-analysis. This study was conducted following the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses consensus statement (PROSPERO ID: CRD42023457120).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCornea
September 2025
Aravind Eye Hospital and Post Graduate Institute of Ophthalmology, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, India; and.
Purpose: To evaluate the long-term visual, functional outcomes, and complications associated with Deep Anterior Lamellar Keratoplasty (DALK) in pediatric keratoconus (KC).
Methods: A retrospective analysis of children aged ≤18 years who underwent DALK for KC between February 2006 and April 2021. Data on preoperative uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA), best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), corneal topography, surgical technique, and complications.
Front Med (Lausanne)
August 2025
Xiamen Eye Center and Eye Institute of Xiamen University, School of Medicine, Xiamen, China.
To investigate corneal deposits in a patient undergoing long-term chlorpromazine therapy using confocal microscopy with the HRT II Rostock Corneal Module. We reported a 45-year-old woman with a 7-year history of chlorpromazine therapy presented with bilateral photophobia and a 4-year history of gradual-onset blurred vision. Slit-lamp examination revealed yellowish deposits in the corneal endothelium and Descemet's membrane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCornea
September 2025
Department of Ophthalmology, Kanazawa University Graduate School of Medical Science, Kanazawa, Japan.
Purpose: To report early clinical outcomes of cultured human corneal endothelial cell (cHCEC) injection therapy (Vyznova) for bullous keratopathy (BK). To our knowledge, this is the first study reporting use of an initial commercial lot of Vyznova implemented at 3 independent institutions specializing in corneal transplantation in Japan.
Methods: This retrospective case series included 4 eyes of 4 patients (mean age, 76.
Cornea
September 2025
Knappschaft Eye Clinic Sulzbach, Knappschaft Hospital Saar, Sulzbach/Saar, Germany.
Purpose: To investigate the impact of donor diabetes mellitus on donor corneal tissue in organ culture on graft preparation, surgical outcomes, and graft survival.
Methods: Retrospective comparison of 273 eyes (218 patients) undergoing DMEK, divided into 2 subgroups [0: donor without diabetes (n = 210); D: donor with diabetes (n = 63)]. The data of visual acuity (VA), central corneal thickness (CCT) and endothelial cell count (ECC), and intra- and postoperative complications were collected.