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To determine if cataract surgery may have an impact on the natural history of early DME (E-DME)
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Cataract surgery worsens preoperative DME, deserving an adequate pre and postoperative treatment. A large British study demonstrated that even eyes without preexisting edema are at risk of DME development after surgery according to the gravity of retinopathy. A new DME classification (the ESASO Classification of DME) defines a new category of DME, named early DME (E-DME) as follow: presence of small intraretinal cysts associated with well-recognizable and detectable inner retinal layers, ellipsoid zone (EZ) and external limiting membrane (ELM), with increase in central subfield thickness (CST) and/or macular volume (MV) less than 30% of maximum normal values.
Due to its undetectable or minimal impact on visual function, E-DME has not yet been studied, and retinologists usually restrict treatment to more advanced cases.
E-DME is the most frequent type of DME among the population undergoing cataract surgery, estimated by DICAT-I Study in 20.7% of the diabetic subjects, corresponding to 5.4% of the general population.
It has been demonstrated that cataract surgery has a negative impact both on diabetic eyes with no DME and in eyes with advanced DME. Even E-DME therefore probably worsens after surgery but there are no data on this matter.
Study Objective: to determine if cataract surgery may have an impact on the natural history of early DME (E-DME) Study Design: prospective multi-center observational case-control study
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Inclusion criteria
Eligible patients will be identified during the regular preoperative cataract examination. In the presence of a diabetic patient, an OCT scan will be performed (according to the protocol, see below).
Only eyes with E-DME will be eligible for the study.
Inclusion criteria may be one of the following:
Exclusion criteria
143 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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