Reoperation for complications within 90 days of minimally invasive glaucoma surgery.
Wesam Shamseldin Shalaby, Joseph Bechay, Jonathan S Myers, Daniel Lee, Reza Razeghinejad, Natasha Nayak Kolomeyer, L Jay Katz, Aakriti Garg Shukla
Summary
The rate of reoperation within the first 90 days after MIGS was low. Elevated IOP and complications associated with gel microstents were the main indications for reoperation.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To describe reoperations that occurred within 90 days of minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS) at a single institution over a 30-month period.
SETTING
Tertiary care hospital.
DESIGN
Retrospective case series.
METHODS
Charts of adult patients who underwent trabecular microbypass stents, gel microstents, and goniotomy procedures (including gonioscopy-assisted transluminal trabeculotomy) from October 1, 2017, to March 15, 2020, at Wills Eye Hospital were examined. Outcome measures were unanticipated reoperations within the first 90 days after MIGS procedures and the complications that led to these reoperations.
RESULTS
A total of 448 MIGS procedures were performed on 436 eyes of 348 patients over a 30-month period by 6 glaucoma surgeons. Of these, 206 (46.0%) were trabecular microbypass stents (198 iStent/iStent inject and 8 Hydrus), 152 (33.9%) were gel microstents, and 90 (20.1%) were goniotomy procedures. Combined phacoemulsification took place in 256 eyes (58.7%). Reoperation within 90 days took place in 23 (5.3%) of 436 eyes, including 16 (10.5%) of 152 eyes in the gel microstent group, 4 (2.0%) of 198 eyes in iStent/iStent inject group, and 3 (3.3%) of 90 eyes in the goniotomy group. Indications for reoperation were elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) in 16 (69.6%) of 23 eyes, gel microstent tip exposure with wound leakage in 3 (13.0%) of 23 eyes, and early gel microstent encapsulation without elevated IOP in 1 (4.3%) of 23 eyes. Two (8.7%) of 23 eyes required reoperation for intraocular lens complications, whereas 1 (4.3%) of 23 eyes had elevated IOP and aphakia requiring reoperation.
CONCLUSIONS
The rate of reoperation within the first 90 days after MIGS was low. Elevated IOP and complications associated with gel microstents were the main indications for reoperation.
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