Outcomes and predictive factors after cataract surgery in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration. The Fight Retinal Blindness! Project
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Daien, Vincent
Nguyen, Vuong
Morlet, Nigel
Arnold, Jennifer J.
Essex, Rohan
Young, Stephanie
Hunyor, Alex P.
Gillies, Mark C.
Barthelmes, Daniel
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Elsevier
Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate outcomes and predictive factors of visual acuity (VA) change after cataract surgery in patients being treated for neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD).
Design: Retrospective, matched case-control study.
Methods: We studied eyes undergoing cataract surgery that had been tracked since they first started treatment for nAMD. These eyes were compared with a cohort of unoperated
phakic eyes being treated for nAMD (three per case) matched for treatment duration before cataract surgery, baseline VA, age and length of follow-up.
Results: We included 124 patients that had cataract surgery and 372 matched controls. The mean (95% CI) VA gained was 10.6 letters (7.8, 13.2; P < 0.001) 12 months following surgery; 26.0% had gained ≥ 3 lines and 1.6% had lost ≥ 3 lines of VA. Visual acuity (mean [SD]) 12 months after surgery was higher in eyes that had cataract extraction compared with controls (65.8 [17.1] vs. 61.3 [20.8] letters respectively, P = 0.018). The proportion of visits where the choroidal neovascular (CNV) lesion was graded active and the mean number of injections were similar before and after surgery (P = 0.506 and P = 0.316, respectively), while both decreased in the control group, suggesting that surgery modestly increased the level of
activity of the CNV lesion. Mean [SD] VA prior to surgery was lower in eyes that gained ≥15 letters compared with eyes that gained 0-14 letters (40.2 [21.4] vs. 62.1 [15.1], P < 0.001). Patients undergoing cataract surgery within the first 6 months of anti-VEGF therapy were
more likely to lose rather than gain vision (20.8% lost vision vs. 12.8% and 4.4% gaining ≥15 or 0-14 letters respectively, P = 0.023). Age, receiving an injection at least 2 weeks before surgery, and the CNV lesion type had no discernible association with VA outcomes.
Conclusions: We found evidence of a modest effect of cataract surgery on CNV lesion activity in eyes being treated for nAMD. Despite this, visual outcomes were reassuringly good. Cataract surgery within 6 months of starting treatment for nAMD should be avoided if
possible.
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American Journal of Ophthalmology
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