1. Long-term outcomes of therapeutic corneal transplants performed in a tertiary eye care hospital in South India
- Author
-
Josephine S Christy, Priya Mathews, Rashmita Ravisankar, and Esen K Akpek
- Subjects
anatomical success ,infectious keratitis ,therapeutic keratoplasty outcomes ,therapeutic success ,Ophthalmology ,RE1-994 - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to review the demographics, clinical characteristics, and long-term outcomes of therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty (TPK) performed in a tertiary eye care hospital. Methods: Case records of 149 therapeutic transplants (135 patients) that were performed during the calendar year 2016 were retrospectively analyzed, and outcomes were measured until 3 years of follow-up. Information on demographics, presentation characteristics, keratoplasty indications, offending microbe, and secondary surgical interventions was studied. The final outcome was classified in terms of therapeutic, anatomical, and functional outcomes. Results: The median age of the recipients was 55 years with 61% men. The most common indications for TPK were perforated infectious ulcer (45.9%), nonhealing ulcers (29.9%), and graft infections (17.4%). Fungal etiology was noted in 61.2% and bacterial etiology in 17.4% of the eyes. Therapeutic success was achieved in 130 eyes (89%) at the end of 1 month. Anatomical success was achieved in 130 (98.5%) and 88 patients (86.3%) at the end of 1 and 6 months, respectively. At the 6-month time point, 78 patients (76.5%) attained functional success with vision better than light perception. Three-year follow-up data were available for 23.7% of recipients, of which only 12 patients (37.5%) retained a clear graft either after a primary therapeutic or secondary optical keratoplasty. Conclusion: Therapeutic keratoplasty is highly effective in eradicating infection and providing anatomical integrity. However, timely intervention can aid in achieving the best functional outcome.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF