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Outcomes and Practice Preferences After Endophthalmitis Following Anti-VEGF Intravitreal Injection

Authors :
Ryan J. Whitted
Tavé van Zyl
Kevin J. Blinder
Ananda Kalevar
Carl D. Regillo
John S. Pollack
Asheesh Tewari
Gaurav K. Shah
Lawrence J. Singerman
Abdallah Jeroudi
Jonathan Hu
Charles C. Wykoff
Dean Eliott
Mahdi Rostamizadeh
J. Michael Jumper
Anthony Joseph
Brett M. Weinstock
Musa Abdelaziz
Anthony P. Leonard
Marina Gilca
John W. Kitchens
Yicheng Chen
Vaishali Shah
Rui Wang
Bobeck S. Modjtahedi
Gregory D. Lee
Jeffrey S. Heier
Source :
Journal of VitreoRetinal Diseases. 3:411-419
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2019.

Abstract

Purpose:This study examines treatment-based outcomes of endophthalmitis due to antivascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) intravitreal injection and its effect on subsequent management of neovascular disease.Methods:A retrospective multicenter study was conducted of 157 patients with a diagnosis of endophthalmitis following anti-VEGF intravitreal injection at 10 major ophthalmic centers.Results:The median number of injections before endophthalmitis was 10 (range, 1 to 84 injections). Initial treatment with tap and inject with or without subsequent vitrectomy trended toward smaller visual acuity changes from baseline (4 ETDRS [Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study] letter difference vs 19 ETDRS letter difference) compared with initial vitrectomy, but the difference was not statistically significant. There was no significant change in medication choice among injections after endophthalmitis. There was a statistically significant shift away from regular interval (1- to 2-month) injections and a shift toward treat-and-extend and as-needed injection algorithms.Conclusions:The visual outcomes were not significantly different between patients who initially underwent tap and injection of antibiotics and those who underwent vitrectomy. There was no significant change in medication choice before and after endophthalmitis but there was a shift toward lower-frequency injection algorithms after postintravitreal injection endophthalmitis compared with prior.

Details

ISSN :
24741272 and 24741264
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of VitreoRetinal Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8788ea7b3e618ed6424abb2718e9c9b9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/2474126419858492