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Factors Associated With Good Visual Acuity Outcomes After Retinectomy in Eyes With Proliferative Vitreoretinopathy

Authors :
Rachel N. Israilevich
Matthew R. Starr
Raziyeh Mahmoudzadeh
Mirataollah Salabati
Vishal Swaminathan
Denis Huang
Ajay E. Kuriyan
Yoshihiro Yonekawa
Sunir J. Garg
Sonia Mehta
Carl D. Regillo
Jason Hsu
Source :
American journal of ophthalmology. 240
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To investigate factors associated with good visual acuity (VA) following repair of rhegmatogenous retinal detachments (RD) with proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR) undergoing retinectomy.Interventional, retrospective, case-control study.This single-institution study evaluated patients who underwent retinectomy during repair of RD with PVR from January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2019. A good VA cohort was identified based on a final VA ≥20/70. A 2:1 age-matched and gender-matched poor VA cohort with VA20/70 was subsequently identified. Metrics compared between the two cohorts included time from primary and recurrent RD diagnosis to surgery, lens status, initial RD size, macula involvement, PVR grade, and size of retinectomy.A total of 5355 eyes were diagnosed with primary RD during the study period, of which 345 had PVR and underwent retinectomy. The good VA cohort included 62 eyes with a mean final logMAR VA of 0.32 [Snellen 20/42], while the poor VA cohort included 119 eyes with a mean final logMAR VA of 1.54 [Snellen 20/693; P.0001]. On multivariate analysis, smaller initial RD size (P = .0090), fewer surgeries (P = .0002), shorter time between recurrent RD diagnosis and subsequent surgeries (P = .0006), better preoperative VA (P = .0276), and pseudophakia at final visit (P = .0049) remained significant predictors of good vision.Eyes undergoing retinectomy during repair of RD with PVR can achieve good VA outcomes. The primary modifiable factor associated with better VA was shorter delay between redetachment diagnosis and surgery, particularly in the absence of silicone oil tamponade.

Details

ISSN :
18791891
Volume :
240
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of ophthalmology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1462d6195e8eb4f4751ca2a5c789a12d