| Literature DB >> 32425503 |
Manachai Nonpassopon1,2, Muanploy Niparugs2,3, Maria Soledad Cortina2.
Abstract
The use of Boston type 1 keratoprosthesis (BKPro) has significantly increased worldwide. It is no longer considered a procedure of last resort but a reasonable option for patients with otherwise poor prognosis for a traditional penetrating keratoplasty. BKPro was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1992 for bilateral severe corneal blindness due to multiple corneal transplant failure. Over the years, indications have extended beyond recurrent immunologic rejection to include other conditions such as chemical injury and other causes of bilateral limbal stem cell deficiency, extensive corneal neovascularization, neurotrophic corneas and hypotony, among others. Numerous advances in the design of the BKPro, improvement of preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative management have resulted in favorable outcomes and a reduction in postoperative complications. Accordingly, many studies have shown that implantation of this device is highly effective in restoring vision with very good short-term outcomes. However, due to the lifetime risk of sight-threatening complications after BKPro implantation, a longer follow-up period should provide outcomes that are more realistic. In this review, the authors examined only the results of publications with an average of at least 2 years of follow-up. The overall intermediate to long-term visual outcomes and retention rate in BKPro seem to be favorable. However, autoimmune diseases and cicatrizing conditions continue to show a higher incidence of postoperative complications that require further management.Entities:
Keywords: Boston keratoprosthesis; corneal transplantation; limbal stem cell deficiency
Year: 2020 PMID: 32425503 PMCID: PMC7196770 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S219270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Type I Boston keratoprosthesis.
Intermediate to Long-Term Results of BKPro Implantation from Single and Multicenter Case Series Studies
| Author | Cohort | N=eyes | Mean Follow-Up Time [Range] (Months) | Primary BKPro | Indication | Preoperative BCVA ≥ 20/200 | Postoperative BCVA ≥ 20/200 | Anatomical Retention at Last Follow-Up | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chang | 1°BKPro in nonimmune disease | 43 | 39 [12–72] | 100% | Aniridia 25.58%, Neurotrophic-keratopathy 13.9%, | 12% | 72% at 2 yrs, 66% at last follow-up | 81% | RPM 51.2%, Worsened glaucoma 32.6%, De novo glaucoma 14%, Corneal melt 18.6%, Endophthalmitis 4.7%, CME 9.3%, Sterile vitritis 14% |
| Driver | 1° BKPro vs previous PKP (2° BKPro) | 67 vs 183 | 42±24.5 [1.9–92.8] vs 38.4 ± 28.3 [0.2–119.2] | 28.6% | Corneal vascularization 43.3%, | 3% vs 6.7% | 78–87% vs 56–67% at 6 yrsǂ | 89.6% vs 87.8% | RPM 40.3% vs 51.2%, PED 37.3% vs 27.4%, Elevated IOP 31.3% vs 17.7%ǂ |
| Kang | 1° BKPro vs previous PKP (2° BKPro) | 28 vs 28 | 60±25.2 vs 60±34.8 | 50% | Chemical injury 29%, | 4% vs 0% | 64–71% vs 29–44% at 5 yrsǂ | 0.032 vs 0.034 per eye-year | RPM 46% vs 35%, New onset glaucoma 36% vs 14%, Post op-glaucoma surgery 29% vs 14%, Endophthalmitis 11% vs 14% |
| Greiner | N/A | 40 | 33.6±16.5 [5–72] | N/A | Graft failure 47.5%, | 5% | 29% at 4 yrs, 50% at last follow-up | 80% | RPM 55%, Elevated IOP 40%, De novo glaucoma 27.5%, Worsened glaucoma 22.5%, Endophthalmitis 12.5%, Corneal melt 15% |
| Lekhanont | ≥4-year follow-up | 47 | 64.9±15.2 [48–88] | 40.5% | PBK 21.4%, | 0% | 42.9% at 6 yrs, 42.9% at last follow-up | 80.9% | RPM 52.4%, New glaucoma 30.9%, Worsen glaucoma 30.9%, Corneal melt 23.8%, Infectious keratitis 21.4%, Endophthalmitis 11.9%, RD 4.7% |
| Samarawickrama | ≥1-year follow-up | 43 | 28.4±12.9 [12–56] | 5% | Bullous keratopathy 56%, | LogMAR 2.22± 0.36 | N/A (improved 46%, same 31%) | 92% | Worsened glaucoma 33%, RPM 21%, Removal BKPro 10%, CME 8%, RD 8%, Infectious keratitis 8%, Endophthalmitis 5%, Hypotony 8% |
| Aravena | ≥5-year follow-up | 58 | 82.8±20.5 [57–145] | 24% | Graft failure 56.9%, | 5% | 82% at 8 yrs, 85% at last follow-up; | 94.8% | RPM 51.3%, PED 43.1%, Sterile corneal melt 25.9%, Increase IOP 24.1%, CME 20.7%, RD 15.5%, Sterile vitritis 12.1%, Endophthalmitis 0% |
| Srikumaran | Multicenter | 139 | 46.7±26 [6 wk −8.7 yrs] | 27.3% | OSD 23%, | 10.8% | 44% at last follow-up | 67% at 7 yrs | RPM 49.7%, Glaucoma requiring surgery 21.6%, Sterile corneal necrosis 19.5%, RD 18.6%, Endophthalmitis 15.5%, PED 8.2%, Corneal infiltrate 3.4% |
Notes: ǂStatistically significant difference. N/A: Not available-either the respective values were not reported or reported in other formats.
Abbreviations: BCVA, best corrected distance visual acuity; BKpro, Boston keratoprosthesis; PKP, penetrating keratoplasty; SJS, Steven’s Johnson syndrome; LSCD, limbal stem cell deficiency; OSD, ocular surface diseases; PBK, pseudophakic bullous keratopathy; KCN, keratoconus; RPM, retroprosthetic membrane; PED, persistent epithelial defect; IOP, intraocular pressure; CME, chronic macular edema; RD, retinal detachment.
Results of Boston Keratoprosthesis Case Series for Specific Indications
| Author | Cohort | N=Eyes | Mean Follow-Up Time [Range] (Months) | Primary BKPro | Indication | Preoperative BCVA ≥20/200 | Postoperative BCVA ≥ 20/200 | Anatomical Retention Rate at Last Follow-Up | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Homayounfar | Age ≥ 75 years | 44 | 27.12 [0.8–72] | 47.7% | Graft failure 52.3%, | 0% | 45.45% at last follow-up | 89% | RPM 45.5%, CME 13.6%, Elevated IOP 9.1%, Kpro-replacement 11.4%, Microbial keratitis 9.1%, Endophthalmitis 6.8%, Sterile vitritis 6.8% |
| Fung | Children ≥16 years | 11 | 26.7 [6.5–85] | 55% | Aniridia 45%, | 0% | N/A (worse 55%, same 27%) | 36% | RPM 82%, Corneal melt 45%, RD 45%, Infectious keratitis with endophthalmitis 27% |
| Aravena | LSCD vs non-LSCD | 54 vs 95 | 37.1±26.4 vs 38.2± 28.9 | 40.7% vs 2.1% | Graft failure 25.9%, | 7% vs 9% | 76% vs 51% at 2 yrsǂ, 85% vs 46% at 5 yrsǂ | 94.4% vs 86.3% | RPM 37% vs 54%ǂ, PED 50% vs 28%ǂ, Sterile stromal necrosis 22% vs 10%, Corneal infiltrate 20% vs 9%, Endophthalmitis 0% vs 2.1%, BKPro removed 22.2% vs 20% |
| Goins | OSD (no vs mild to moderate vs severe) | 75 | 41.4 [0.8–82.8] | 20% | No OSD 49.3%, | 26.7% | N/A (probability of improve vision at 5 yrs 53%) | 85.3% | RPM 29.7% vs 40% vs 34.8%, |
| Sayegh | SJS | TBKpro I 6 | 43.2±18 [10.2–67.2] | 44% | SJS 94%, | 0% | 50% at last follow-up, (BCVA>20/40 31.25%) | N/A | RPM 56%, Tissue melt and leak 25%, New glaucoma 19%, Endophthalmitis 0%, |
| Palioura | MMP (BKPro I, II) | TBKpro I 8 | 38.4±25.2 | 50% | MMP 100% | 0% | 12.5% at last follow-up | 37.5% | RPM 62.5%, Extrusion 62.5%, RD 37.5%, Endophthalmitis 0% |
| Alexander | Non-SJS vs SJS | 182 vs 27 | 29.3 vs 17.6ǂ | 23.1% vs 66.7%ǂ | Graft failure 56.2%, | 5% vs 0% | 63% vs 96% at last follow-upǂ | 84% vs 55%ǂ | RPM 49% vs 37%, Corneal necrosis 8.3% vs 59.3%ǂ, PED 24.3 vs 59.3%ǂ, Endophthalmitis 2.2% vs 0% |
| Shah | Aniridia | 46 | 54±19.2 [24–88.8] | 26% | Aniridia 100% | 7% | N/A (43.5% BCVA improve ≥ 2 lines at last follow-up) | 87% | RPM 61%, New onset or progression of glaucoma 26% |
| Salvador-Culla | Severe ocular burn | 42 | 40.2±24.4 [6–98] | N/A | Severe ocular burn | 0% | 58% at 3yrs, 77% at 5 yrs | 91.4% at 2 yrs | PCO 52.4%, Glaucoma 33.3%, RPM 11.9%, Corneal melting 31%, RD 4.8%, Vitritis 4.8%, Endophthalmitis 2.4% |
| Shanbhag | Chemical injury | 106 | 24.99±14 | N/A | Alkali and acid burn | N/A | 64.15% at last follow-up | 88.8% at 2 yrs | Valve implantation 10.8%, CPC 4.9%, Removal of KPro 11.76%, Glue application 4.9%, Surgeries for RD 3.9% |
| Brown | HSV vs HZV | 5 vs 4 | 48.4 vs 50.5 | 0% vs 25% | - | 20% vs 25% | 100% vs 25% at last follow-upǂ | 100% vs 25%ǂ | Wound dehiscence 0% vs 75%ǂ, Microbial keratitis 0% vs 75%ǂ, Glaucoma escalation 40% vs 0%, Endophthalmitis 0% vs 50%, CME 0% vs 25% |
| Fry | HSV vs controlled | 11 vs 138 | 43.6±24.2 vs 41.2±30.0 | 9% vs 32% | Control group; Graft failure 68.8% | 9% vs 8% | 60% vs 62% at 3 yrs | 64% vs 91%ǂ | RPM 45.5% vs 48.8%, PED 63.6% vs 34.1%, CME 45.5% vs 12.3%ǂ, Corneal infiltrate 27.3% vs 12.3%, Elevated IOP 27.3% vs 15.2%, Sterile vitritis 18.2% vs 9.4% |
Notes: ǂStatistically significant difference. N/A: Not available-either the respective values were not reported or reported in other formats.
Abbreviations: BCVA, best-corrected distance visual acuity; BKpro, Boston keratoprosthesis; SJS, Steven’s Johnson syndrome; TEN, toxic epidermal necrolysis; LSCD, limbal stem cell deficiency; OSD, ocular surface diseases; MMP, mucous membrane pemphigoid; HSV, herpes simplex viral infection; HZV, herpes zoster viral infection; RPM, retroprosthetic membrane; PCO, posterior capsular opacification; PED, persistent epithelial defect; IOP, intraocular pressure; CME, chronic macular edema; RD, retinal detachment.
Figure 2Patient with implanted type 1 Boston keratoprosthesis. (A) Anterior segment OCT showing sterile corneal melt. There is evidence of back plate exposure (*). (B) One week after graft replacement without removing the keratoprosthesis for the treatment of corneal melt. (C) Postoperative anterior segment OCT showing good graft apposition with the KPro optical stem in the same patient.
Figure 3Slit-lamp photograph of a patient with BKPro I implant combined with pars plana glaucoma drainage device (GDD) 8 years ago. This approach allowed good contact lens fitting and eliminated friction between the contact lens and plate/tube of GDD. Kontur lens base curve 8.9 and diameter 16 mm is in place.