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The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to investigate when it is optimal to treat the eye disease epiretinal fibrosis.
Hypothesis: In a population of patients with symptomatic idiopathic epiretinal fibrosis and visual acuity above 0.4, the best long term outcome measured by visual acuity is achieved by early surgery compared to periodic controls until a continual loss of visual acuity has been ensure followed by surgery.
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Epiretinal fibrosis is a disease of the macula, which affects the central retina, and there by the central vision. Epiretinal fibrosis is due to a growth of connective tissue on retinas surface.
From population studies shows that 15% of patients with epiretinal fibrosis will develop moderate to severe loss of visual acuity. Earlier studies have shown that surgery to remove the epiretinal membrane most often leads to improvements in visual acuity if not a normalization of this. The reason why not everyone has normalization of their visual acuity could be growth of connective in the deeper layers of the retina. This intraretinal fibrosis develops over time and is presumed to worsen with the duration of the condition.
In a patient with symptomatic epiretinal fibrosis and visual acuity over 0,4, the current clinical practice is to utilize the wait and see approach, where you hold of treatment until you have made sure that the patients visual acuity is declining. With the wait and see approach you avoid doing surgery on eyes that would have remained stable in their visual acuity. On the other hand will the same approach always ensure that we do surgery on eye that have deteriorated visual acuity, usually to a point of 0,1-0,3 and longer duration of disease.
Hence the results of delayed surgery are presumably worse than what could have been achieved by operating at an earlier point.
This project aims to investigate if you can give the patients a more favorable long term result by doing surgery earlier compared to the traditional wait and see approach.
This study is a prospective randomized clinical trial. We aim to include 60 patients, where 20 will be randomized to early surgery (intervention) and 40 to a close follow-up program(control). If the patients in the control group loss more than 10 Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) letters during the follow-up of of they request surgery for their epiretinal fibrosis they will be offered the same operation as the intervention group.
The Intervention group is to have clear lens extraction if they are not already operated for cataract. This is within 4 weeks of inclusion, and another 4 weeks after this they will have their epiretinal fibrosis removed by pars plana vitrectomy.
There are clinical controls after 3,6,9 and 12 months after inclusion/surgery for both groups.
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56 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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