Abstract

BackgroundThere are no data available regarding the complications associated with using antibiotic ointment at the end of intraocular surgery. This study aimed to explore the necessity of using ocular tobramycin-dexamethasone prophylactically at the end of intraocular surgery.MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study of patients who received intraocular surgery at Tianjin Medical University General Hospital from January 2015 to December 2017. The patients were grouped according to whether they received tobramycin-dexamethasone eye ointment or not after surgery. The Tobramycin dexamethasone eye ointment was sampled to observe bacterial contamination pathogens at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 6, 8, 24, 36, 48, 72, and 168 h after being opened.ResultsA total of 3811 eyes in 3811 patients (mean age of 63 ± 12 years) were included: 2397 eyes that received prophylactic tobramycin-dexamethasone eye ointment and 1414 eyes that did not. The overall rate of endophthalmitis was 0.08% (3/3811) in our study, all in the eye ointment group (0.12%, 3/2397); no patients developed endophthalmitis in the non-ointment group (0%, 0/1414)(P = 0.184). The anterior chamber reactions 1 day after surgery were more serious in the eye ointment group compared with the non-ointment group (all P < 0.05), but there were no statistically significant differences at 1 month postoperatively (all P > 0.05). The contamination rate was 0% at all time points over 7 days.ConclusionWe did not observe a statistically significant difference in the incidence of endophthalmitis in patients with or without prophylactic tobramycin-dexamethasone eye ointment. And tobramycin-dexamethasone eye ointment seemed to increase some side effects such as eye secretions increasing and foreign body feeling.

Highlights

  • There are no data available regarding the complications associated with using antibiotic ointment at the end of intraocular surgery

  • The eye ointment treatment group included 1305 eyes treated for cataract, 535 eyes treated with vitrectomy, and 557 eyes treated for glaucoma

  • The non-ointment treatment group included 669 eyes treated for cataract, 343 eyes treated with vitrectomy, and 402 eyes treated for glaucoma

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Summary

Introduction

There are no data available regarding the complications associated with using antibiotic ointment at the end of intraocular surgery. This study aimed to explore the necessity of using ocular tobramycindexamethasone prophylactically at the end of intraocular surgery. The incidence of endophthalmitis after intraocular surgery varies from 0.02 to 0.84% [4, 5]. Recent prophylactic trials for endophthalmitis has included preoperative antibiotic drops, conjunctival sac flushing, and antibiotic cream at the end of intraocular surgery [10]. Several studies have shown that prophylactic antibiotics are useful for preventing infection, but there are no scientific guidelines to support the use of preoperative antibiotics [13]. In Germany, prophylactic topical antibiotics are used pre- and postoperatively in all patients undergoing intraocular surgery [14]. Tobramycindexamethasone has been shown to be safe and effective in controlling inflammation and infection after cataract surgery [16]

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