| Literature DB >> 19668388 |
Stephen G Schwartz1, Harry W Flynn.
Abstract
Pars plana vitrectomy (PPV) is growing in popularity for the treatment of primary rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RD). PPV achieves favorable anatomic and visual outcomes in a wide variety of patients, especially in pseudophakic RD. A growing number of clinical series, both retrospective and prospective, have demonstrated generally comparable outcomes comparing PPV and scleral buckling (SB) under a variety of circumstances. The Scleral Buckling Versus Primary Vitrectomy in Rhegmatogenous Retinal Detachment (SPR) study is a multicenter, randomized, prospective, controlled clinical trial comparing SB versus PPV. This study should provide useful guidelines in the future. At this time, the choice of SB versus PPV should be based on the characteristics of the RD, the patient as a whole, and the experience and preference of the individual retinal surgeon.Entities:
Keywords: pars plana vitrectomy; rhegmatogneous retinal detachment; scleral buckling
Year: 2008 PMID: 19668388 PMCID: PMC2698718 DOI: 10.2147/opth.s1511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Primary rhegmatogenous retinal detachment, left eye, with a flap retinal tear at 1:00.
Figure 2Pars plana vitrectomy (PPV) for rhegmatogenous retinal detachment, utilizing wide-field imaging and small-gauge transconjunctival sutureless instrumentation.
Pars plana vitrectomy (PPV) versus scleral buckling (SB)
| PPV | SB | |
|---|---|---|
| Visualization of retinal breaks | Generally better | Generally good |
| Relief of vitreoretinal traction | Direct | Indirect |
| Location of retinal break | More effective for superior breaks | Effective regardless of break location |
| Subretinal fluid drainage | Internal | External |
| Post-operative positioning | Generally required | Generally not required |
| Post-operative pain | Generally less | Generally more |
| Surgical costs | Higher | Lower |
| Advantages | Clears vitreous opacities | Supports “missed” breaks |
| Giant retinal tears | Allows early air travel | |
| Identification of “missed” breaks | ||
| Faster foveal re-attachment | ||
| Potential complications | New retinal breaks | Refractive change |
| Elevated intraocular pressure from gas bubble | Motility disturbance | |
| Retinal or optic nerve trauma | Retinal or vitreous incarceration | |
| Induced cataract | Migration of buckling elements | |
| Disruption of LASIK flap | Infection of buckling elements | |
| Moisture condensation on silicone | Suprachoroidal or subretinal hemorrhage | |
| IOL during fluid-air exchange | ||
| Retained perfluorocarbon liquids | ||
| Retinal incarceration |
Abbreviations: IOL, intraocular lens; LASIK, laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis.
Adapted from Schwartz and Flynn (2006).
Pars plana vitrectomy: traditional teaching versus current literature
| Clinical variable | Traditional teaching | Newer literature |
|---|---|---|
| Inferior breaks | Less effective for patients with inferior breaks | Favorable outcomes in these patients |
| Gas tamponade | Importance of long-acting gas tamponade | Favorable outcomes with air or short-acting gas tamponade |
| Prone positioning | Importance of prone positioning | Favorable outcomes in patients with inferior breaks without prone positioning |
Sharma et al 2004.
Martinez-Castillo, Verdugo, et al 2005.
Martinez-Castillo, Boixadera, et al 2005.
Martinez-Castillo et al 2007.
Selected case series of pars plana vitrectomy for rhegmatogenous retinal detachment
| Study | Number of patients | SOSR | Visual acuity outcomes | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29 | 79% | ≥20/50 in 81% | Phakic and pseudophakic | |
| 294 | 86%–91% | Median 20/40 | Pseudophakic | |
| 78 | 94% | ≥20/50 in 87%–88% | Pseudophakic | |
| 22 | 86% | Median 20/40 | Phakic and pseudophakic | |
| 205 | 71% | ≥20/50 in 11% | Included PVR | |
| 48 | 81% | Mean 20/66 | Inferior breaks | |
| 15 | 93% | Mean 20/30 | Inferior breaks, pseudophakic, air as tamponade | |
| 40 | 90% | Mean 20/33 | Inferior breaks, pseudophakic, no facedown positioning | |
| 512 | 71% | ≥20/50 in 48% | Included PVR, included some PPV/SB | |
| 131 | 87% | Mean 20/80 | Phakic and pseudophakic | |
| 60 | 98% | Mean 20/59 | Pseudophakic, aqueous tamponade |
Abbreviations: PPV/SB, combined pars plana vitrectomy/scleral buckling; PVR, proliferative vitreoretinopathy.
Adapted from SPR Study Group (2003) and Schwartz and Flynn (2006).
Selected retrospective comparative trials
| Number of patients
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | SB | PPV | SB and PPV | SOSR |
| 55 | 47 | 0 | Equal (91% SB, 91% PPV) | |
| 138 | 87 | 0 | Equal (92% SB, 92% PPV) | |
| 60 | 10 | 30 | Equivalent (98% SB, 93% PPV and SB/PPV combined) | |
| 30 | 0 | 22 | Higher for SB/PPV (80% SB, 90% SB/PPV, p = 0.001) | |
| 0 | 41 | 45 | Equivalent (89% PPV, 73% SB/PPV, p = 0.11) | |
| 92 | 19 | 0 | Equivalent (85% SB, 95% PPV, no p value given) | |
| 26 | 0 | 18 | Equivalent (62% SB, 72% SB/PPV, p = 0.17) | |
| 0 | 68 | 84 | Equivalent (93% PPV, 94% SB/PPV, p = 0.75) | |
Abbreviations: PPV, Pars plana vitrectomy; RD, Retinal detachment; SB, Scleral buckling; SOSR, Single-operation success rate.
In these 2 studies, most patients in the PPV group underwent PPV only; however, a small (unreported) number of patients underwent combined SB/PPV in each study.
Used silicone oil as the tamponade agent. “Most” patients also underwent SB, but some were PPV only.
Adapted from SPR Study Group (2003) and Schwartz and Flynn (2006).
Selected prospective comparative trials
| Number of patients
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | SB | PPV | SB and PPV | Results |
| 20 | 0 | 20 | Equivalent SOSR (70% SB, 80% SB/PPV, p = 0.72), equivalent vision (median 20/120 SB, 20/200 SB/PPV, p = 0.4) | |
| Ahmadieh et al 2004* | 126 | 99 | 0 | Equivalent SOSR (68% SB, 63% PPV, p = 0.24), equal vision (mean 20/182 SB, 20/182 PPV) |
| 0 | 45 | 26 | Equivalent SOSR (98% PPV, 92% SB/PPV, no p value given), equivalent vision (improvement ≥3 lines in 60% PPV, 69% SB/PPV, no p value given) | |
| 25 | 25 | 0 | Equivalent SOSR (76% SB, 84% PPV, p = 0.48), better vision with PPV (20/105 SB, 20/71 PPV, p = 0.034) | |
| 75 | 75 | 0 | Higher SOSR for PPV (83% SB, 94% PPV, p = 0.037), equivalent vision (20/50 SB, 20/43 PPV, p = 0.26) | |
Randomized trial.
Abbreviations: RD, Retinal detachment; PPV, Pars plana vitrectomy; SB, Scleral buckling; SOSR, Single-operation success rate.
Adapted from Schwartz and Flynn (2006).