J Cataract Refract Surg
J Cataract Refract SurgNovember 2025Journal Article

Prescription patterns in DMEK: European survey.

IOP & Medical Therapy

Summary

Current prescription patterns in routine and high-risk DMEK vary significantly, reflecting the lack of standardized guidelines.

Abstract

PURPOSE

To assess current prescription patterns in Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (DMEK) in Europe.

SETTING

Countries affiliated with the European Cornea and Cell Transplantation Registry and the European Vision Institute Clinical Research Network.

DESIGN

Cross-sectional study (European survey).

METHODS

An electronic survey was distributed to 16 national societies to gather data on prescription patterns for DMEK. Responses were categorized by 3 clinical goals: prevention of postoperative endophthalmitis, graft rejection, and pupillary block and glaucoma.

RESULTS

Responses from 136 surgeons revealed that medication protocols mainly came from departmental protocols (54%) or personal experiences (48%) rather than national guidelines (22%) (multiple answers were allowed). Infection prevention primarily relied on intraoperative (72%) and postoperative (92%) antibiotics, with preoperative use less common (18%). Steroids were the mainstay for rejection prevention, used intraoperatively (59%), postoperatively (100%), and occasionally preoperatively (13%). Steroids were typically tapered to once daily after 6 months (46%) and discontinued after varying durations (65%). Dexamethasone was the preferred steroid. For high-risk DMEK, the most common approach was adding another topical (30%) or systemic immunosuppressive drug (24%), such as cyclosporine or mycophenolate. For graft rejection, most respondents increased topical steroid frequency (85%) or added (peri)bulbar steroid injections (42%). Pupillary block and glaucoma prophylaxis mainly involved intraoperative mydriatics (34%); intraocular pressure-lowering agents were rarely used (0.7% to 2.2%). For steroid-induced ocular hypertension, the common approach was switching to a lower-potency steroid (40%) or reducing steroid frequency (43%).

CONCLUSIONS

Current prescription patterns in routine and high-risk DMEK vary significantly, reflecting the lack of standardized guidelines.

In the Knowledge Library

Discussion

Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.