Abstract

Objective: To describe the characteristics, indications, complications, and outcomes of the patients who underwent Boston type 1 keratoprosthesis (KPro) surgery at the Université de Montreal affiliated Notre-Dame Hospital. Design: Retrospective case series. Participants: Forty-seven eyes of 43 patients who underwent KPro surgery. Methods: The charts of all patients who underwent KPro surgery at Notre-Dame Hospital between October 2008 and February 2010 were retrospectively reviewed. Preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative parameters were collected and analyzed. Results: The indication for Boston type 1 KPro was corneal graft failure in 27 eyes; 20 eyes had KPro as a primary procedure. Preoperative diagnoses included aniridia (34%), mechanical trauma (11%), infections (9%), surgery-related bullous keratopathy (9%), chemical burns (9%), corneal dystrophies (9%), and Stevens-Johnson syndrome (2%). A known history of glaucoma was present in 36 eyes (77%). Median preoperative best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was hand motion (range, 20/100 to light perception). The assembly of the KPro and surgery were uneventful in all cases. Mean follow-up was 10 ± 5 months. Median BCVA at last follow-up was 20/150 (range, 20/30 to no light perception). The device retention rate was 100% at the end of the follow-up period. Postoperative complications included retroprosthetic membrane in 12 eyes (26%) and glaucoma progression in 11 eyes (23%). Conclusions: Our study demonstrates an excellent retention rate of the Boston type 1 KPro and an improvement of BCVA in the majority of patients. Many patients undergoing KPro surgery have ocular comorbidities that require ongoing care to prevent further vision loss following KPro surgery.

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