Long-term outcome comparison between femtosecond laser-assisted and manual Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty
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Authors: Nir Sorkin, Zale Mednick, Adi Einan-Lifshitz, Tanya
Trinh, Gisella Santaella, Alexandre Telli, Clara C. Chan, David S. Rootman
Author Disclosure Block: N. Sorkin: None. Z.
Mednick: None. A. Einan-Lifshitz: None. T.
Trinh: None. G. Santaella: None. A. Telli: None. C.C.
Chan: Any direct financial payments including receipt of honoraria;
Allergan, Alcon Labs Inc., Shire, Santen. Membership on advisory boards or
speakers’ bureaus; Allergan, Bausch & Lomb, Johnson & Johnson, Shire,
Santen. Funded grants or clinical trials; Allergan, Bausch & Lomb,
TearLab. D.S. Rootman: None.
Abstract Body:
Purpose: To evaluate long-term outcomes of
femtosecond-enabled Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (F-DMEK) compared
with manual Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty (M-DMEK) in patients
with Fuchs endothelial dystrophy (FED)
Study Design: A retrospective, interventional case series
Methods: Included were eyes with FED and cataract that underwent
either F-DMEK or M-DMEK combined with cataract extraction at the Toronto
Western Hospital, and had at least 18 months’ follow-up. Exclusion criteria:
complicated anterior segments, previous vitrectomy, previous keratoplasty,
corneal opacity or any other visually significant ocular comorbidity.
Results: Included were 16 eyes of 15 patients in the F-DMEK group
(average follow-up 33.0±9.0 months) and 45 eyes of 40 patients in the M-DMEK
group (average follow-up 32.0±7.0 months). There were no issues with the
creation of femtosecond descemetorhexis (in the F-DMEK group) - all
descemetorhexis cuts were complete. BSCVA improvement did not differ
significantly between the groups at 1, 2 and 3 years (p=0.849, p=0.465 and
p=0.936, respectively). Rates of significant detachment in F-DMEK and M-DMEK
were 1 of 16 eyes (6.25%) and 16 of 45 eyes (35.6%), respectively (p=0.027).
Rebubbling rates were 1 of 16 eyes (6.25%) and 15 of 45 eyes (33.3%),
respectively (p=0.047). Cell-loss rates following F-DMEK and M-DMEK were 26.8%
and 36.5% at 1 year (p=0.042), 30.5% and 42.3% at 2 years (p=0.008), 37% and
47.5% at 3 years (p=0.057), respectively. Graft failure rate was 0% in F-DMEK
and 8.9% in M-DMEK (all were primary failures, p=0.565).
Conclusions: F-DMEK showed good long-term efficacy with reduced
detachment, rebubble and cell-loss rates, compared with M-DMEK.