Risk factors for retinal detachment in Marfan syndrome after paediatric lens removal

News
Article

Investigators put forth a list of considerations for surgeons ahead of lens removalin paediatric patients

A child with glasses paints at an easel. Image credit: ©Iryna – stock.adobe.com

Investigators considered patients' age, axial length, gender, number of surgeries, IOL implantation status and other characteristics. Image credit: ©Iryna – stock.adobe.com

Youssef Abdelmassih, MD, and colleagues from the Paediatric Ophthalmology Department, Rothschild Foundation Hospital, Paris, reported that paediatric patients with Marfan syndrome with a long axial length are more likely to have a retinal detachment develop after lens surgery.1

The investigators undertook this retrospective case control study to determine the risk factors for a retinal detachment after lenses are removed from these patients. The study included children younger than 18 years who had Marfan syndrome and underwent a surgery to remove the lens.

The investigators collected the patients’ clinical and surgical characteristics from their electronic files, which included age, axial length, gender, number of surgeries they underwent, intraocular lens (IOL) implantation at the first surgery, complete removal of the capsular bag and final best-corrected visual acuity. The study’s main outcome measure was the determination of the risk factors associated with development of a retinal detachment.

The study included 158 eyes of 85 children. Of those, a retinal detachment developed in 35 eyes (22.2%) during follow-up; detachments in both eyes developed in 11 patients (45.8%), the investigators reported. The patient ages at the time of lens removal surgery did not differ between groups.

The children in whom a retinal detachment developed had a higher axial length (p<.001), longer follow-up, IOL implantation and capsular residue.

“Multivariate analysis identified capsular residue (odds ratio [OR] 16.8; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.9-148.8; P=0.01), and axial length (OR 1.3; 95% CI, 1.01-1.7; P=0.03) as predictors for development of a retinal detachment,” the authors said.

Based on those findings, they concluded that children with Marfan syndrome with increased axial length were more likely to develop a retinal detachment after lens surgery. “When considering lens removal surgery in a paediatric population presenting with Marfan's syndrome, a complete capsular removal seemed to be the safer option regarding the risk of retinal detachment,” they advised.


Reference


1. Abdelmassih Y, Lecoge R, Hassani E, et al. Risk factors for retinal detachment in Marfan syndrome after pediatric lens removal. Am J Ophthalmol. 2024; published online May 29; doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2024.05.003
Recent Videos
Charles Wykoff, MD, PhD, discusses his Floretina ICOOR presentation topic, retinal non-perfusion in diabetic retinopathy, with David Hutton, editor of Ophthalmology Times
Elizabeth Cohen, MD, discusses the Zoster Eye Disease study at the 2024 AAO meeting
Victoria L Tseng, MD, PhD, professor of ophthalmology and glaucoma specialist, UCLA
Brent Kramer, MD, of Vance Thompson Vision speaks at the 2024 AAO meeting
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.