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- Donald T H Tan, Prathiba Janardhanan, Huijun Zhou, Yiong-Huak Chan, Hla Myint Htoon, Leonard P K Ang, and Laurence S Lim.
- Singapore National Eye Centre, Singapore. snecdt@pacific.net.sg
- Ophthalmology. 2008 Jun 1; 115 (6): 975-982.e1.
PurposeThe Singapore Corneal Transplant Study (SCTS) is a 16-year prospective study of 2100 consecutive corneal transplants performed between January 1991 and November 2006 in patients from Southeast Asia at a single tertiary center. The indications, complications, long-term survival rates, and risk factors for graft failure of penetrating keratoplasty (PK) performed in Asian eyes are reported.DesignProspective cohort study.ParticipantsOf the 2100 corneal transplants, 1130 consecutive PKs were performed from January 1991 to December 2003. One graft per patient was selected, leaving 901 grafts for analysis.MethodsData were obtained from the Singapore Eye Bank's SCTS database. Cases were classified into optical, therapeutic, and tectonic indications and 9 corneal disease groups. Twenty-four demographic, preoperative, intraoperative, and donor risk factors were subjected to Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, univariate analysis, and multivariate analysis by Cox proportional hazards regression modeling.Main Outcome MeasureGraft failure, defined as the irreversible loss of optical clarity.ResultsStudy patients were Asian, comprising Chinese (72.7%), Indian (11.54%), and Malay (11.1%) ethnicities (mean age, 56.65 years). The mean follow-up period was 36.8+/-35.5 months. Indications for surgery were optical (87.0%), therapeutic (8.1%), and tectonic (4.88%). Main diagnoses were pseudophakic/aphakic bullous keratopathy (23.4%), postinfectious scarring (12.9%), regrafts (12.4%), keratoconus (9.7%), and posttraumatic scarring (7.3%). Kaplan-Meier survival rates for optical grafts were 86.6%, 72.0%, 63.7%, and 52.0% at 1, 3, 5, and 10 years, respectively; survival rates for therapeutic grafts were 78.4%, 58.3%, and 37.3% at 1, 3, and 5 years, and those for tectonic grafts were 68.3% and 41.7% at 1 and 3 years. Endothelial rejection and late endothelial decompensation accounted for 50.51% of failures. Multivariate analysis revealed 9 predictors for graft failure: recipient gender, age, graft size, graft endothelial status, primary corneal disease, glaucoma, inflammation, perforation, and corneal vascularization.ConclusionsThe long-term outcome for optical indications in Asian eyes follows a trend in endothelium-related attrition similar to that seen in the West. Tectonic and therapeutic keratoplasty for corneal infections and perforation, however, constitute a significant proportion of corneal transplantation performed in Asia and carry a graver prognosis in terms of graft survival.
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