Department of Ophthalmology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.
Retina Physicians & Surgeons, Inc., Dayton, Ohio.
Ophthalmology. 2015 Nov;122(11):2159-68. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2015.05.014. Epub 2015 Jun 26.
To review the available evidence on the effectiveness of prophylactic topical nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in preventing vision loss resulting from cystoid macular edema (CME) after cataract surgery.
Literature searches of the PubMed and the Cochrane Library databases were last conducted on January 21, 2015, with no date restrictions. The searches retrieved 149 unique citations. The first author reviewed the abstracts of these articles and selected 27 articles of possible clinical relevance for full-text review. Of these 27 articles, 12 were deemed relevant to analyze in full. Two additional articles were identified from the reference list of the selected articles, and another article was identified from a national meeting. The panel methodologist assigned ratings of level of evidence to each of the selected citations.
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug therapy was effective in reducing CME detected by angiography or optical coherence tomography (OCT) and may increase the speed of visual recovery after surgery when compared directly with placebo or topical corticosteroid formulations with limited intraocular penetration. However, the use of NSAIDs did not alter long-term (≥3 months) visual outcomes. Furthermore, there was no evidence that the benefits observed with NSAID therapy could not be obtained similarly with equivalent dosing of a corticosteroid. The reported impression that there is a pharmacologic drug synergy from the use of both an NSAID and a corticosteroid is not supported by the literature. There is no uniform method of reporting CME in the literature, which prevents accurate assessment of its incidence and response to anti-inflammatory therapies.
Cystoid macular edema after cataract surgery has a tendency to resolve spontaneously. There is a lack of level I evidence that supports the long-term benefit of NSAID therapy to prevent vision loss from CME at 3 months or more after cataract surgery. Although dosing of NSAIDs before surgery may hasten the speed of visual recovery in the first several weeks after cataract surgery, there is no evidence that this practice affects long-term visual outcomes. Standardized reporting of CME based on OCT may allow for more uniform quantitation of its incidence and more reliable assessment of treatment outcomes.
回顾现有关于预防性局部非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)在预防白内障手术后因囊样黄斑水肿(CME)导致视力丧失的有效性的证据。
对 PubMed 和 Cochrane 图书馆数据库的文献进行了最后一次检索,检索日期无限制,检索时间为 2015 年 1 月 21 日。检索共获取 149 个独特的引用。第一作者审查了这些文章的摘要,并选择了 27 篇可能具有临床相关性的文章进行全文审查。在这 27 篇文章中,有 12 篇被认为与全面分析相关。从选定文章的参考文献中又确定了另外 2 篇文章,从一次全国会议中确定了另外 1 篇文章。方法学家小组为每个选定的引文分配了证据水平的评分。
与安慰剂或局部皮质类固醇制剂(具有有限的眼内穿透性)相比,NSAID 治疗在通过血管造影或光学相干断层扫描(OCT)检测到 CME 时有效,并可能增加手术后的视力恢复速度。然而,NSAID 的使用并未改变长期(≥3 个月)的视觉结果。此外,没有证据表明 NSAID 治疗的益处不能通过等效剂量的皮质类固醇获得。文献中没有证据表明使用 NSAID 和皮质类固醇之间存在药理学药物协同作用的印象。文献中没有统一的 CME 报告方法,这阻碍了对其发病率和对抗炎治疗反应的准确评估。
白内障手术后的囊样黄斑水肿有自行消退的趋势。缺乏一级证据支持 NSAID 治疗在白内障手术后 3 个月或更长时间预防 CME 导致视力丧失的长期益处。虽然手术前使用 NSAIDs 可能会加快白内障手术后最初几周的视力恢复速度,但没有证据表明这种做法会影响长期的视觉结果。基于 OCT 的 CME 的标准化报告可能允许更统一地定量其发病率,并更可靠地评估治疗结果。