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The objectives of this study are to compare the visual and refractive outcomes of deep lamellar endothelial keratoplasty (DLEK) with penetrating keratoplasty as treatment for certain cases of corneal edema due to endothelial decompensation. Additionally, data will be collected to compare corneal shape, corneal thickness, endothelial cell density, keratocyte density, corneal sensitivity, light scatter, and subjective visual function between the two procedures.
Full description
This will be a randomized prospective study. We will enroll patients using the following inclusion and exclusion criteria, based upon the surgeon?s initial complete ophthalmic examination, which includes refraction, keratometry, slit lamp examination, intraocular pressure and corneal thickness measurement, and dilated fundus examination.
Inclusion criteria:
Study eye; best spectacle-corrected entrance acuity 20/40 or worse
Contralateral eye; best spectacle-corrected entrance acuity equal to or better than the study eye and 20/200 or better.
Exclusion criteria:
In the 2-year period, January 2001 to January 2003, 67 PK?s were performed at Mayo Clinic for endothelial dysfunction (e.g., Fuch?s dystrophy or pseudophakic corneal edema) in patients who met the entry criteria for this protocol. During the 2-year enrollment period of this study, we anticipate that up to 50 patients will be enrolled. Appropriate counseling will be done, including a discussion of the potential benefits and risks of the procedures. IRB-approved consent forms will be signed. Enrolled patients will return on a different day (often the day before surgery or the morning of surgery to be performed in the afternoon) for the preoperative Keratogram. Randomization and assignment of the patient to DLEK or PK will occur after the preoperative Keratogram and after the surgeon has accepted a donor cornea from the eye bank for the procedure.
Keratogram
The Keratogram consists of a series of tests administered both pre- and post-operatively by trained research personnel who are masked to the patients? particular randomizations. Keratograms will be performed preoperatively and at 1 month (3-6 weeks), 3 months (2-4 months), 6 months (5-7 months), and 1, 2, and 3 years (3 months) postoperatively. The following measurement procedures, to be conducted only on the operated eye, are included in each Keratogram. The equipment to be used is included in parentheses:
Eligibility of Fellow Eyes Fellow eyes in bilateral cases will be eligible to enter the study 4 months or more after the first procedure if these eyes now meet the eligibility criteria (i.e., if the fellow eye now has worse vision than the operated study eye). These eyes will be randomized separately and follow the same protocol, with the exception that the patient may override the randomization if he or she prefers to have one or the other of the 2 procedures. For data analysis, fellow eyes will be considered a separate group.
Adverse Occurrences For DLEK, adverse occurrences at the time of surgery (such as premature entry into the anterior chamber during recipient lamellar dissection) will require conversion to a standard PK and the patient will be exited from the study. Adverse postoperative occurrences in either surgical group (such as a dislocated disc, uncontrolled rejection, primary graft failure, infection or other adverse events) will be managed by the surgeon according to standard practices. These patients will remain in the study and will have identical follow-up.
SURGICAL METHODS
Anesthesia:
Anesthesia options will include monitored, attended, local anesthesia or general orotracheal anesthesia, depending on the particular patient?s desire and comorbid conditions. For local anesthesia a standard retrobulbar and facial nerve block as done for standard PK will be utilized.
Preparation of recipient:
Preparation of donor tissue
Donor corneo-scleral tissue is removed from the storage media, endothelium is coated with healon, and the tissue is secured in the Moria artificial anterior chamber.
A deep lamellar dissection pocket is formed in the donor with a crescent blade followed by a stromal dissector spatula.
The donor tissue is placed (endothelial side up) onto the trephination block and the same size trephine (same size as recipient disc tissue diameter) is used to trephine the donor disc.
The donor disc is separated from the corneo-scleral donor tissue and placed endothelial side down or folded in half (if a 4.5mm incision was made) onto a healon coated transfer spatula.
Transfer of donor to recipient
Air is injected into the anterior chamber. 2) The donor tissue disc is placed into the anterior chamber through the lamellar incision.
The spatula is removed from the eye by sliding out from under the Healon coating.
The disc position is finely manipulated with a needle or hook as needed, taking care to minimize endothelial touch.
The limbal wound is sutured with interrupted 10-0 nylon sutures. 6) The anterior chamber air bubble is replaced 50% with balanced salt solution. 7) A Seidel test is performed. If positive, additional limbal sutures are placed.
The conjunctiva is closed with cautery or sutures. 9) Subconjunctival dexamethasone, 2 mg or Solu-Medrol, 30 mg and cefazolin, 25 mg or gentamicin, 20 mg, are injected in the inferior fornix. The eye is bandaged with a gauze patch and a Fox shield.
The patient is instructed to spend the next two postoperative hours in a supine position.
Routine postoperative orders for corneal transplantation are given upon discharge from the hospital that day.
POSTOPERATIVE CARE The patient will be seen the day after the surgery. Postoperative medications will include topical antibiotic of the surgeon?s choice, twice daily for one to two weeks and prednisolone acetate 1%, four times daily. The steroid drop will be tapered by one drop daily each month. Alterations to the steroid taper and other medical treatment will be made based upon individual patient conditions and response. Patient activity restrictions and eye protection measures will follow the usual PK recommendations by the individual surgeon. All patients will be seen at the following intervals: preoperatively and at 1 week (5-14 days), 1 month (3-6 weeks), 3 months (4-6 months), 6 months (5-7 months), and 1, 2, and 3 years (3 months) postoperatively. Keratograms will be performed at each visit, except one day and one week postoperatively. Confocal microscopy will be done as part of each keratogram and also at the one week postoperative visit. Additional clinic visits may be requested by the surgeon as needed for proper medical management. Corneal suture removal in penetrating grafts or limbal suture removal in DLEK will be dictated by patient healing and at the surgeon?s discretion.
DATA COLLECTION AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS Data collection will be performed with the instruments and schedule delineated above in the Methods section. The following outcome measures will be calculated from the data. These will be compared between the 2 groups (DLEK and PK) at each postoperative time by using t-tests or rank sum tests with Bonferroni corrections.
Primary Outcome Measures
For an additional use of the data, primary outcome data on the patients randomized to DLEK from our center will be pooled with data from other participating centers in the Endothelial Keratoplasty Group organized by Mark Terry, M.D., Portland, OR, who will coordinate data collection and statistical analysis. Pooled data will be used to calculate mean postoperative visual acuity, refractive outcomes and frequency of favorable outcome. These data will be compared with published data on PK.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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