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Early Real-World Physician Experience with an Intracanalicular Dexamethasone Insert.

Authors :
Matossian, Cynthia
Stephens, John D
Rhee, Michelle K
Smith, Stephen E
Majmudar, Parag A
Gollamudi, Subba Rao
Patel, Ravi H
Rosselson, Maria E
Bauskar, Aditi
Montieth, Alyssa
Silva, Fabiana Q
Vantipalli, Srilatha
Gibson, Andrea
Metzinger, Jamie Lynne
Goldstein, Michael H
Source :
Clinical Ophthalmology; Aug2022, Vol. 16, p2429-2440, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose: To describe the early real-world experience of physicians with an intracanalicular dexamethasone insert (DEX) in patients undergoing cataract surgery and to capture the clinical impact of adopting this therapy. Patients and Methods: 23 United States sites including Ambulatory Surgical Center Setting (ASC) and Outpatient Clinical settings. Respondents were physicians who had early experience with DEX in cataract surgery patients. This was a Phase 4 experiential cross-sectional survey study comprised of 3 sequential online physician surveys. Descriptive statistics summarized the surveys' responses to determine the early impressions of the respondents. Results: Forty-two physicians completed surveys. On average, physicians reported feeling comfortable administering DEX after placing 3 inserts (mean 2.7; standard deviation 1.9). Most physicians (92%) were satisfied with DEX, and all physicians (100%) reported that DEX improved patient compliance. Most physicians (62.5%) indicated they would highly prefer DEX over traditional steroid eyedrops for the management of post-surgical inflammation and pain. Conclusion: The surveys exploring the early use of DEX suggest that DEX is a clinically effective treatment with a rapid initial learning curve and integrates well into clinical use. Physicians had a very positive early experience with DEX, including comfort with insertion and satisfaction. DEX shows promise as a primary treatment choice of physicians for ocular inflammation and pain following cataract surgery by offering patients a hands-free innovative therapy that delivers a preservative-free steroid to the ocular surface over approximately 30 days. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11775467
Volume :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Clinical Ophthalmology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159497962
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2147/OPTH.S372440