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EFFECT OF COMBINED CATARACT SURGERY AND RANIBIZUMAB INJECTION IN POSTOPERATIVE MACULAR EDEMA IN NONPROLIFERATIVE DIABETIC RETINOPATHY

70

Citations

25

References

2013

Year

Abstract

To evaluate whether intravitreal ranibizumab injection at cataract surgery prevents postoperative diabetic macular edema (PME) in patients with stable diabetic retinopathy without significant macular edema.Eighty patients with cataract, stable diabetic retinopathy, and no significant macular edema were randomized to a sham group (cataract surgery only) or a group undergoing cataract surgery plus intraoperative ranibizumab injection. Best-corrected visual acuities, central subfield thickness, and total macular volume were assessed at baseline and 1 week, 1, 3, and 6 months postoperatively by spectral domain optical coherence tomography. Clinically meaningful PME (central subfield thickness increase >60 μm relative to baseline) was computed.The groups did not differ in baseline best-corrected visual acuity, central subfield thickness, and total macular volume. Compared with the ranibizumab injection group, the sham group had significantly larger central subfield thickness increases relative to baseline at 1 week and 1 month; larger total macular volume increases at all time points (P = 0.012, P = 0.005, P < 0.001, P < 0.001, P = 0.005, P = 0.017, respectively); higher PME frequency at 1 month (P = 0.019); and poorer best-corrected visual acuity improvement from baseline to 6 months after surgery (P = 0.046).In patients with stable diabetic retinopathy without significant macular edema, intravitreal ranibizumab injection at cataract surgery may prevent the postoperative worsening of macular edema and may improve the final visual outcome without affecting safety.

References

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