Repeat Keratoplasty for Failed Therapeutic Keratoplasty for Microbial Keratitis: An Analysis of Characteristics and Risk Factors

Author:

Wan Jifeng1,Lin Jing1,Hu Yin1,Wei Menghuan1,Zou Yingshi1,Yuan Zhaohui1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology, Zhongshan Opthalmic Center, Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China

Abstract

Purpose. To report the ratio of repeat-to-initial keratoplasty among patients who had underwent therapeutic keratoplasty for microbial keratitis in Southern China and to investigate the characteristics and risk factors of repeat keratoplasty. Methods. A retrospective and inclusive review of the clinical records of patients who had received therapeutic keratoplasty for microbial keratitis, at Zhongshan Ophthalmic Center during December 2012 to January 2018, was performed. Patients who suffered coexistent endophthalmitis or underwent keratoplasty combined with other surgeries were excluded. Data on clinical characteristics of all eligible patients were collected. Results. A total of 447 patients were identified. Their mean age was 48.7 ± 15.5 years, and 290 (64.9%) were male. Out of the 447 patients, 18 (4.0%) received repeat keratoplasty. Their mean age was 45.9 ± 11.3 years, and 14 (77.8%) were male. The most common indication of repeat keratoplasty (12/18) was refractory infectious keratitis. Most of the patients (15/18, 83.3%) received the second keratoplasty within 12 months after the initial keratoplasty. Factors, including age, gender, initial causative organism, presence of initial corneal perforation, ocular comorbidities, and surgical procedures were not found statistically significantly different between patients who received and not received repeat keratoplasty. Conclusion. The ratio of repeat-to-initial keratoplasty for therapeutic keratoplasty is low, compared to a failure rate of the initial grafts of over 50% reported in previous studies. The low ratio and the most common indication of repeat keratoplasty, refractory infectious keratitis, reflect caution for performing regrafts in such patients.

Funder

Guangzhou Science and Technology Program key projects

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Ophthalmology

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