| Literature DB >> 34904056 |
Evdoxia-Maria Karasavvidou1, Craig Wilde2, Anwar Zaman2, Gavin Orr2, Dharmalingam Kumudhan2, Georgios D Panos2.
Abstract
There are several available options for the demanding surgical correction of paediatric aphakia without sufficient capsular support. The literature suggests the implantation of a transscleral fixated posterior chamber-intraocular lens (PCIOL), an intrascleral fixated PCIOL, an iris-sutured intraocular lens (IOL), or an anterior chamber iris-claw IOL. We searched for reports on the management of paediatric aphakia in case of inadequate capsular support that delineated the diverse surgical approaches and their postoperative results. Analysis demonstrated that different complications can be encountered depending on IOL placement technique, such as suture rupture, IOL dislocation, secondary glaucoma, endophthalmitis, vitreous hemorrhage, and endothelial cell loss. However, it was shown that various IOL designs have similar visual outcomes. Taking into consideration the advantages and disadvantages of each surgical technique, ophthalmic surgeons can determine the safest and most efficient approach for paediatric aphakic patients.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34904056 PMCID: PMC8665890 DOI: 10.1155/2021/2253486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2090-004X Impact factor: 1.909
The most important studies of scleral-sutured IOLs in paediatric population.
| Study | Design | Number of patients (eyes) | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sharpe et al. (1996) | Retrospective outcomes of scleral-sutured PCIOLs | 7 (7) | (1) VA improvement in six of seven patients (average improvement of 4 lines) |
| (2) Complications: scleral fixation suture exposure ( | |||
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| Lam et al. (1998) | Retrospective safety and efficacy of scleral fixated IOLs | 3 (6) | (1) Good visual improvement |
| (2) Stable and well-positioned PCIOL after surgery in all eyes | |||
| (3) Complications: asymptomatic pupillary IOL capture in 3 eyes | |||
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| Kumar et al. (1999) | Prospective case series evaluation of scleral fixated IOL implantation | 11 (11) | (1) Postoperative BCVA: stable in 54.5%, improved by more than 1 Snellen line 27.2% and decreased by more than 1 Snellen line in 18.1% |
| (2) Complications: suture erosion through the conjunctiva in 18.18%, marked postoperative anterior chamber reaction in 18.18%, IOL decentration in 9.09%, glaucoma in 9.09%, and cystoid macular edema in 9.09% | |||
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| Zetterström et al. (1999) | Retrospective long-term outcomes of scleral-sutured PCIOLs | 13 (21) | (1) Postoperative BCVA: stable or improved |
| (2) Complications: posterior synechiae ( | |||
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| Vadalà et al. (2000) | Retrospective results of scleral fixated IOLs | 3 (5) | (1) Postoperative VA: 20/20 to 20/40 |
| (2) Complications: IOL dislocation ( | |||
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| Jacobi et al. (2002) | Prospective evaluation of transscleral fixated IOLs | 26 (26) | (1) Postoperatively, BCVA within one Snellen line was achieved by more than 80% of the patients |
| (2) Complications: IOP increase in 11.5%, marked anterior chamber reaction in 15.4%, IOL decentration in 19.2%, and suture erosion through the conjunctiva in 7.4% | |||
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| Sewelam et al. (2001) | Retrospective haptic position evaluation of transscleral fixated PC IOLs using UBM | 20 (20) | IOL haptics located in the sulcus (55.0%), anterior to the sulcus (27.5%), and posterior to the sulcus (17.5%) |
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| Ozmen et al. (2002) | Retrospective assessment of the visual outcome and complications of transscleral fixated IOLs | 18 (21) | (1) Visual improvement of more than 2 Snellen lines in 9 eyes (42.8%) |
| (2) Complications: the most severe were concurrent endophthalmitis and retinal detachment ( | |||
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| Bardorf et al. (2004) | Retrospective long-term results of transscleral-sutured IOLs | (1) Postoperative VA: improved in 70%; in 51% improved by two lines or more; no patient suffered visual acuity loss | |
| (2) Complications: small hyphemas (7%), vitreous hemorrhage (5%), ocular hypertension or hypotony (5%) and iris capture of the IOL optic (5%); no retinal detachment or other retinal complications were reported | |||
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| Buckley (2007) | Retrospective long-term outcomes of transscleral-sutured PCIOLs | 26 (33) | (1) Postoperative VA: significantly improved ( |
| (2) Complications: intraoperative and immediate postoperative minimal and not sight-threatening; IOL subluxation due to spontaneous 10-0 polypropylene suture breakage ( | |||
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| Asadi and Kheirkhah (2008) | Case series long-term results of transscleral fixated PCIOLs | 23 (25) | (1) Postoperative BCVA: improved in 48% by >1 Snellen line; the main cause of reduced vision was corneal and retinal pathologies and amblyopia |
| (2) Complications: transient intraocular hemorrhage (52%), transient choroidal effusion (8%), late endophthalmitis (4%), retinal detachment (4%), and late IOL dislocation due to breakage of polypropylene sutures after 7 to 10 years (24%) | |||
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| Olsen and Pribila (2011) | Retrospective sulcus fixated, sutured PCIOL using endoscopic guidance during PPV | 20 (21) | (1) Most patients had visual function improvement |
| (2) Complications: suture breakage ( | |||
| (3) Advantages: excellent visualization and haptic localization, optimal lens centration, buried knots, broad scleral imbrication, and minimal vitreous- and hemorrhage-related complications | |||
| (4) Disadvantages: learning curve, increased operative time, long-term suture stability issues, and limited availability of intraocular endoscopes | |||
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| Burcu et al. (2014) | Retrospective evaluation of the outcomes of scleral fixated PCIOLs | 14 (24) | Median postoperative BCVA: 0.2 (min: hand motion; max: 0.8) in decimal notation ( |
PCIOL: posterior chamber-intraocular lens, VA: visual acuity, BCVA: best corrected visual acuity, IOP: intraocular pressure, UBM: ultrasound biomicroscopy, and PPV: pars-plana vitrectomy.
The most important studies of Artisan IOL in paediatric aphakic patients.
| Study | Design | Number of patients (eyes) | Key results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lifshitz et al. (2004) | Retrospective Artisan IOL for idiopathic subluxated lenses | 3 (4) | (1) Postoperative BCVA 6/12 or better in 3 cases that could be recorded |
| (2) VA improved by 2 or more Snellen lines in all eyes | |||
| (3) Complications: none | |||
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| Odenthal et al. (2006) | Retrospective ECL evaluation after Artisan IOL for traumatic and congenital cataract | 10 (10) | (1) ECL: 41% in the traumatic cataract group |
| (2) ECL related to the original corneal scar length of the trauma | |||
| (3) No statistical difference in ECC between operated and unoperated eye in the congenital cataract group | |||
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| Sminia et al. (2007) | Retrospective Artisan IOL for aphakia after trauma | 5 (5) | (1) Postoperative BCVA 20/40 or better in 4 eyes |
| (2) Mean ECL: 40% | |||
| (3) Complications: retinal detachment 19 months after primary injury in one eye | |||
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| Hirashima et al. (2010) | Randomized controlled trial anterior vs. posterior chamber iris-claw IOL lens subluxation in Marfan | 16 (31) | (1) Postoperative BCVA did not differ significantly between groups |
| (2) Complications: IOL dislocation ( | |||
| (3) Mean postoperative foveal thickness decreased in 54.16% of the patients | |||
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| Sminia et al. (2011) | Retrospective ECL evaluation after Artisan IOL for traumatic and congenital cataract | 10 (20) | Postoperative mean ECC comparable to the mean normal ECC for this age group reported in the literature |
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| Sminia et al. (2012) | Retrospective Artisan IOL for ectopia lentis in Marfan | 2 (4) | Good postoperative visual outcome, no serious IOL-related complications, and ECC within the expected range for normal eyes |
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| Cleary et al. (2012) | Retrospective Artisan iris-claw IOL for ectopia lentis | 5 (8) | (1) Postoperative mean VA: 0.04 ± 0.09 logMAR ( |
| (2) Mean postoperative ECL: 14.2% ( | |||
| (3) Complications: none | |||
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| Siddiqui et al. (2013) 23316948 | Prospective evaluation of visual outcomes and ECC after Artisan IOL for lens subluxation | 11 (18) | (1) Mean postoperative BCVA: 0.26 ± 0.13 logMAR ( |
| (2) Mean postoperative ECL: 17.1% | |||
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| Tychsen and Faron (2013) | Prospective outcomes of Artisan IOL for aphakia | 17 (28) | (1) Postoperatively, BCVA improved an average 2 Snellen lines (0.18 logMAR) |
| (2) Complications: pupillary block ( | |||
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| Gawdat et al. (2015) | Prospective outcomes of Artisan IOL for aphakia | 18 (25) | (1) Postoperative BCVA for traumatic aphakia and lens subluxation improved to 0.38 ± 0.15 logMAR ( |
| (2) One year postoperative significant decrease of ECC (2892.64 ± 441.79 cells/mm2) | |||
| (3) Complications: traumatic dislocation ( | |||
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| Manning et al. (2016) | Retrospective outcomes after Artisan IOL for ectopia lentis in Marfan | 8 (16) | (1) Mean postoperative BCVA: 0.12 ± 0.19 logMAR |
| (2) Mean postoperative ECL: 15.4% | |||
| (3) Complications: pupillary block ( | |||
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| Kavitha et al. (2016) | Retrospective outcomes of Artisan IOL vs. PCIOL for traumatic cataract | 50 (50) | (1) BCVA improvement in both groups with no significant difference in BCVA logMAR between them |
| (2) Complications in the Artisan IOL group: secondary glaucoma ( | |||
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| Catala-Mora et al. (2017) | Prospective outcomes of Artisan IOL for ectopia lentis | 12 (21) | (1) Mean BCVA improved from 0.91 ± 0.29 logMAR to 0.18 ± 0.23 logMAR at final follow-up ( |
| (2) Postoperative ECL: 5.04% ± 9.58% with an annual ECL rate of 3.16% ± 4.46% | |||
| (3) Complications: traumatic IOL dislocation and retinal detachment ( | |||
IOL: intraocular lens, BCVA: best corrected visual acuity, VA: visual acuity, ECL: endothelial cell loss, and ECC: endothelial cell count.