The Safety of Office-Based Pterygium Surgery

IF 4.2 1区 医学 Q1 OPHTHALMOLOGY American Journal of Ophthalmology Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-11 DOI:10.1016/j.ajo.2025.02.005
Sandra Lora Cremers , Adam G. Hidad , Jenny Ha , Matthew Joy , Kishan Avaiya , Emma Antall , Elise Bolin , Jesus Alberto Martinez
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Abstract

PURPOSE

Hospital and ambulatory eye surgical procedures continue to transition to the office setting. Pterygium surgery is the most commonly performed ocular surface surgical procedure in the world. No studies to date have evaluated its safety in the office-based surgical setting. Our study evaluates the safety, complication rate, cost-savings, and cosmetic satisfaction of office-based pterygiectomy.

DESIGN

Retrospective case series.

METHODS

A retrospective review was performed. Procedures were performed in an office-based suite with a Zeiss surgical microscope by two board-certified ophthalmologists under topical anesthesia and oral sedation. Over a 3 year period (2013-2016), 1071 office-based pterygiectomies were performed. Follow-up was performed via in-person office visits. Data collected included: date of service; location of pterygium (nasal, temporal, or both); primary or recurrent; use of mitomycin C, fibrin glue, and amniotic membrane; preoperative and postoperative refraction; intraocular pressure (IOP); endothelial cell density (ECD); patient-reported pain (as measured by an eleven-point visual analog scale, 0-10); cosmetic satisfaction; intraoperative surgical time; speculum width; incidence of ptosis (defined as a decrease in MRD1 by 2 mm) postoperatively at 12 weeks and 1 year and postoperative complications. Postoperative measures were checked at 1 day, 2 weeks, 1 month, 2 months, 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year. The average operational and procedural costs were compared between in-office and comparable surgical centers and academic hospital cases in our area.

RESULTS

A total of 1015 pterygia from 992 eyes were examined postoperatively. One case of central retinal artery occlusion due to peribulbar anesthetic injection with epinephrine at postoperative week 2 was noted, leading to the removal of epinephrine from the anesthetic regimen. At the 1-year follow-up, 393 pterygium cases in 343 eyes were assessed. One-year complication rates included overall recurrence (N = 8/393; 2.04%), dellen (N = 12/393; 3.05%), and granuloma (N = 15/393; 3.82%), ptosis 2.6% (N = 9/343). There were no cases of infection. Patient-reported pain scores remained less than 1.0 peri‑ and postoperatively, and cosmetic satisfaction was greater than 88% at 1 year. The average cost of office-based pterygium surgery was $1795 ($1700-$1890, depending on supplies used). In comparison, the costs at local surgical centers and hospitals were $3812.50 ($2625-$5000) and $5562 ($5095-$6029), respectively.

CONCLUSION

Office-based pterygiectomy is safe, cost-effective, and offers low recurrence rates and high patient satisfaction.
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办公室式翼状胬肉手术的安全性。
目的:医院和门诊眼科手术程序继续向办公室环境过渡。翼状胬肉手术是世界上最常见的眼表外科手术。到目前为止,还没有研究评估其在办公室手术环境中的安全性。我们的研究评估了办公室翼状胬肉切除术的安全性、并发症发生率、成本节约和美容满意度。设计:回顾性病例系列方法:进行回顾性研究。手术由两名获得眼科委员会认证的医生在表面麻醉和口服镇静的情况下,在蔡司手术显微镜下进行。在3年期间(2013-2016年),进行了1071例基于办公室的翼状胬肉切除术。通过面对面的办公室访问进行随访。收集的资料包括:服务日期;翼状胬肉位置(鼻部、颞部或两者);原发的或复发的;丝裂霉素C、纤维蛋白胶、羊膜的使用;术前术后屈光;眼内压;内皮细胞密度(ECD);患者报告的疼痛(通过11分视觉模拟量表,0-10);化妆品的满足感;术中手术时间;窥器宽度;术后12周和1年的上睑下垂发生率(定义为MRD1下降2mm)和术后并发症。分别于术后1天、2周、1个月、2个月、3个月、6个月和1年进行检查。本研究比较了本区内、同类外科中心和学术医院病例的平均手术和程序费用。结果:术后992只眼共检查翼状胬肉1015例。我们注意到一例术后第2周因球周麻醉注射肾上腺素导致的视网膜中央动脉闭塞,导致肾上腺素从麻醉方案中去除。在1年的随访中,对343只眼睛的393例翼状胬肉进行评估。1年并发症发生率包括总复发率(N=8/393;2.04%), dellen (N=12/393;3.05%),肉芽肿(N=15/393;3.82%),上睑下垂2.6% (N=9/343)。没有感染病例。患者报告的疼痛评分在围手术期和术后均小于1.0,1年后美容满意度大于88%。以办公室为基础的翼状胬肉手术的平均费用为1795美元(根据所使用的器材不同,为1700- 1890美元)。相比之下,当地外科中心和医院的费用分别为3812.50美元(2625美元至5000美元)和5562美元(5095美元至6029美元)。结论:基于办公室的翼状胬肉切除术安全、经济、复发率低、患者满意度高。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
406
审稿时长
36 days
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Ophthalmology is a peer-reviewed, scientific publication that welcomes the submission of original, previously unpublished manuscripts directed to ophthalmologists and visual science specialists describing clinical investigations, clinical observations, and clinically relevant laboratory investigations. Published monthly since 1884, the full text of the American Journal of Ophthalmology and supplementary material are also presented online at www.AJO.com and on ScienceDirect. The American Journal of Ophthalmology publishes Full-Length Articles, Perspectives, Editorials, Correspondences, Books Reports and Announcements. Brief Reports and Case Reports are no longer published. We recommend submitting Brief Reports and Case Reports to our companion publication, the American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports. Manuscripts are accepted with the understanding that they have not been and will not be published elsewhere substantially in any format, and that there are no ethical problems with the content or data collection. Authors may be requested to produce the data upon which the manuscript is based and to answer expeditiously any questions about the manuscript or its authors.
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