Evaluation of giant-cell deposits on foldable intraocular lenses after combined cataract and glaucoma surgery

2000 
Abstract Purpose To compare the incidence of inflammatory giant-cell deposits (IGCDs) on various foldable intraocular lenses (IOLs) after combined cataract and glaucoma surgery. Setting The Phillips Eye Institute, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Methods In this prospective randomized clinical trial, 128 patients were randomized to receive a single-piece, first-generation silicone lens (n = 36); a 3-piece acrylic lens (n = 40); or 3-piece, second-generation silicone lens (n = 52). All patients had combined phacoemulsification and trabeculectomy with mitomycin-C by 1 surgeon using a standardized technique. Dilated biomicroscopy was used to identify and quantitate IGCDs on the surface of the IOLs using a 6-point grading scale. Results Inflammatory giant-cell deposits were identified on 21 of 128 IOLs. Lens design was the most significant risk factor for deposit formation ( P = .004). Inflammatory giant-cell deposits were most common in the first-generation silicone plate lens group (33%), less common in the acrylic lens group (15%), and least common in the 3-piece, second-generation silicone group (5.8%). Density of the deposits was significantly greater on the plate lens than the acrylic or the 3-piece silicone lenses ( P P = .02) and preoperative miotic use ( P = .04). Conclusion Inflammatory giant-cell deposit formation was significantly greater on first-generation silicone plate IOLs than on acrylic or second-generation silicone IOLs. The deposits were somewhat more common on acrylic IOLs than on second-generation silicone IOLs. However, this difference was not clinically or statistically significant.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    14
    References
    20
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []