Abstract

Objective: to determine the relationship between adherence to treatment in patients undergoing penetrating keratoplasty (PKP) and corneal graft survival over a 12-month follow-up period. Material and methods. A retrospective analysis of 56 patients who underwent "high risk" PKP was performed. Patients were divided into 2 groups according to their compliance. The full compliance group included those with more than 90% of visits within the first year after the intervention; the poor compliance group included those with more than 10% of missed visits. Results. The high adherence group was characterised by a higher proportion of women (p=0.033), a mean 7 years younger age of the patients (p=0.021) and a predominance of higher education (p=0.014). One year after PKP, patients with complete compliance (74%) were more likely to have a favourable outcome than those with incomplete compliance (48%) (p=0.046). The calculation of the odds ratio (OR 3.52; Cl: 1.1362-10.88; p=0.045) indicated a statistically significant role of treatment adherence as a factor in keratoplasty efficacy. The high compliance group had a visual acuity gain of 2 lines at 12 months (p=0.003). Conclusion. Compliance after corneal transplantation has a significant impact on graft survival and clinical outcome. The development and implementation of a set of measures to increase adherence could significantly improve the safety and efficacy of this high-tech treatment for patients with disabling corneal pathology.

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