Intraoperative Complications and Visual Outcomes of Cataract Surgery in Diabetes Mellitus: A Multicenter Database Study
医学
糖尿病
多中心研究
白内障手术
外科
数据库
眼科
随机对照试验
内分泌学
计算机科学
作者
John R. Chancellor,Mohamed Kamel Soliman,Catherine C. Shoults,Mohammed F. Faramawi,Hytham Al-Hindi,Kyle A. Kirkland,Colin J. Chu,Yit Yang,Ahmed B. Sallam
Purpose To compare the visual outcome and the rate of intraoperative complications in eyes of diabetic and nondiabetic patients undergoing phacoemulsification over 15 years. Design Retrospective clinical cohort study. Methods Data of 179,159 eyes that underwent phacoemulsification at 8 centers were classified based on the presence or absence of diabetes mellitus. Visual acuity (VA) was defined as the best value of uncorrected or corrected distance measure available. For the VA analysis, eyes with co-pathologies or combined surgical procedures were further excluded, leaving a subset of 90,729 eyes. Main outcome measures were logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) VA at 4-12 weeks postoperatively, and rate of intraoperative complications. Results Cataract surgery in eyes of diabetic patients was associated with an improvement in mean VA of 0.48 logMAR (5 Snellen lines). Mean postoperative VA was slightly worse in diabetic compared to nondiabetic group (logMAR 0.23 vs 0.13; Snellen 20/30 vs 20/25; P < .0001) and the proportions of eyes achieving a visual gain of ≥3 Snellen lines (≥0.3 logMAR) was lower in the diabetic group (56.6% vs 63.5%; P < .0001). There was a linear relationship between diabetic retinopathy severity and worse postoperative visual acuity (β coefficient 0.098 to 0.288; P < .0001). We observed higher rates of posterior capsule rupture (2.3% vs 1.6%; P < .001) and dropped nuclear fragments (0.3% vs 0.2%; P < .001) in the diabetic group. Conclusions Postoperative VA negatively correlated with diabetes and diabetic retinopathy severity. Eyes of diabetic subjects had higher risks of posterior capsule rupture. To compare the visual outcome and the rate of intraoperative complications in eyes of diabetic and nondiabetic patients undergoing phacoemulsification over 15 years. Retrospective clinical cohort study. Data of 179,159 eyes that underwent phacoemulsification at 8 centers were classified based on the presence or absence of diabetes mellitus. Visual acuity (VA) was defined as the best value of uncorrected or corrected distance measure available. For the VA analysis, eyes with co-pathologies or combined surgical procedures were further excluded, leaving a subset of 90,729 eyes. Main outcome measures were logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) VA at 4-12 weeks postoperatively, and rate of intraoperative complications. Cataract surgery in eyes of diabetic patients was associated with an improvement in mean VA of 0.48 logMAR (5 Snellen lines). Mean postoperative VA was slightly worse in diabetic compared to nondiabetic group (logMAR 0.23 vs 0.13; Snellen 20/30 vs 20/25; P < .0001) and the proportions of eyes achieving a visual gain of ≥3 Snellen lines (≥0.3 logMAR) was lower in the diabetic group (56.6% vs 63.5%; P < .0001). There was a linear relationship between diabetic retinopathy severity and worse postoperative visual acuity (β coefficient 0.098 to 0.288; P < .0001). We observed higher rates of posterior capsule rupture (2.3% vs 1.6%; P < .001) and dropped nuclear fragments (0.3% vs 0.2%; P < .001) in the diabetic group. Postoperative VA negatively correlated with diabetes and diabetic retinopathy severity. Eyes of diabetic subjects had higher risks of posterior capsule rupture.