Glaucoma Management in Patients With Aniridia and Boston Type 1 Keratoprosthesis.
Nascimento E Silva Rafaella, Shen Lucy Q, Chiou Carolina A, Shanbhag Swapna S, Paschalis Eleftherios I, Pasquale Louis R, Colby Kathryn A, Dohlman Claes H, Chodosh James, Alves Milton R
AI Summary
This study found aniridia patients receiving Boston KPro have higher glaucoma prevalence but achieve similar visual outcomes as other KPro patients if glaucoma is managed aggressively, often with prophylactic tube shunts.
Abstract
Purpose
To assess outcomes and glaucoma management in eyes with aniridia following Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) implantation.
Design
Retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
Methods
The population included patients with aniridia and patients with other preoperative diagnoses (excluding Stevens-Johnson syndrome, mucous membrane pemphigoid, and congenital disorders) who underwent KPro implantation at Massachusetts Eye and Ear with at least 2 years of follow-up. One eye per patient was selected based on the longer follow-up time. The main outcome was intermediate and long-term outcomes related to glaucoma.
Results
The aniridia (n = 22) and comparison (n = 61) groups had similar preoperative visual acuity (VA, mean ± standard deviation, 1.86 ± 0.52 logMAR, P = .33) and follow-up time (65.6 ± 26.3 months, P = .25). Before KPro implantation, eyes with aniridia had more glaucoma (76.2%) and glaucoma surgery (57.1%) than comparison eyes (51.8%, P = .053; 23.2%, P = .005, respectively). More Ahmed valves were co-implanted with KPro in aniridia (47.6%) vs comparison eyes (17.9%, P = .008). At final follow-up, more aniridia eyes had glaucoma (90.5%) than comparison eyes (64.3%, P = .02), but the 2 groups had similar percentages of eyes with cup-to-disc ratio (CDR) >0.8 (23.8% vs. 30.4%, P = .57) or CDR progression of ≥0.2 (42.9% vs 44.6%, P = .89, respectively). None of the eyes with prophylactic tube implantation developed glaucoma. Eyes with and without aniridia did not differ in post-KPro VA improvement (72.7%, 72.1%, P = .96), and final VA (1.28 ± 0.79 logMAR, 1.23 ± 0.98 logMAR, P = .51).
Conclusion
Despite a higher glaucoma prevalence, eyes with aniridia achieved similar VA as comparison eyes with more than 5 years of mean follow-up time. Boston KPro offers satisfactory visual rehabilitation in aniridia when glaucoma is managed aggressively.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts6
At final follow-up, more aniridia eyes (90.5%) had glaucoma than comparison eyes (64.3%, P = .02) after Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) implantation in a retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
None of the eyes with prophylactic tube implantation developed glaucoma following Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) implantation in a retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
Despite a higher glaucoma prevalence, eyes with aniridia achieved similar visual acuity as comparison eyes after Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) implantation, with more than 5 years of mean follow-up time, in a retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
Before Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) implantation, eyes with aniridia (n=22) had a higher prevalence of glaucoma (76.2%) compared to comparison eyes (51.8%, P = .053) in a retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
Before Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) implantation, eyes with aniridia (n=22) had a higher rate of prior glaucoma surgery (57.1%) compared to comparison eyes (23.2%, P = .005) in a retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
More Ahmed valves were co-implanted with Boston type 1 Keratoprosthesis (KPro) in eyes with aniridia (47.6%) compared to comparison eyes (17.9%, P = .008) in a retrospective, interventional comparative case series.
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