Ten-year outcomes of congenital cataract surgery performed within the first six months of life.
Tetsuro Oshika, Sachiko Nishina, Noriyuki Unoki, Mai Miyagi, Koji Nomura, Takafumi Mori, Naoko Matsuki, Takao Endo, Daijiro Kurosaka, Kazuno Negishi, Shigeo Yoshida, Toshiyuki Nagamoto
Summary
In patients with genuine congenital cataract, surgery within the critical period of visual development results in better final visual acuity, albeit with an increased risk of visual axis opacification.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To investigate the long-term outcomes of congenital cataract surgery performed within the first 6 months of life.
SETTING
11 ophthalmic surgical sites in Japan.
DESIGN
Retrospective chart review.
METHODS
Medical charts were retrospectively reviewed for 216 eyes of 121 patients. The age at surgery was 2.9 ± 1.7 months, with follow-up duration 13.0 ± 2.3 years. The cohort consisted of 83 cases with bilateral aphakia, 12 with bilateral pseudophakia, 20 with unilateral aphakia, and 6 with unilateral pseudophakia.
RESULTS
Surgical intervention within the critical period of visual system development (10 weeks for bilateral and 6 weeks for unilateral cases) led to significantly better final visual acuity than surgery conducted after this time frame. The incidence of secondary glaucoma was similar between groups while the occurrence of visual axis opacification was more frequent with earlier surgery. A forward stepwise multiple regression analysis revealed that the final visual acuity was significantly associated with laterality of cataract (better outcomes in bilateral cases), phakic status (with pseudophakia outperforming aphakia), presence of systemic and ocular comorbidities, and development of secondary glaucoma. Secondary glaucoma was significantly more prevalent in aphakic eyes than pseudophakic eyes.
CONCLUSIONS
In patients with genuine congenital cataract, surgery within the critical period of visual development results in better final visual acuity, albeit with an increased risk of visual axis opacification. The use of IOL with sophisticated surgical techniques shows promise even in congenital cataract surgery.
More by Tetsuro Oshika
View full profile →Morphometric assessment of normal human ciliary body using ultrasound biomicroscopy.
Quantitative Evaluation of Phase Retardation in Filtering Blebs Using Polarization-Sensitive Optical Coherence Tomography.
Deep learning model for extensive smartphone-based diagnosis and triage of cataracts and multiple corneal diseases.
Top Research in Epidemiology & Genetics
Browse all →The Risks and Benefits of Myopia Control.
Two Phase 3 Clinical Trials Comparing the Safety and Efficacy of Netarsudil to Timolol in Patients With Elevated Intraocular Pressure: Rho Kinase Elevated IOP Treatment Trial 1 and 2 (ROCKET-1 and ROCKET-2).
Neuroprotective strategies for retinal disease.
In the Knowledge Library
Discussion
Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.