Ophthalmology
1991 Jun;98(6):895-902
National outcomes of cataract extraction. I. Retinal detachment after inpatient
surgery.
Javitt JC, Vitale S, Canner JK, Krakauer H, McBean AM, Sommer A.
Worthen Center for Eye Care Research, Georgetown University Medical Center,
Washington DC.
Rehospitalization for retinal detachment (RD) was studied in 338,141
Medicare beneficiaries older than 65 years of age who were undergoing
inpatient cataract extraction in 1984. Extracapsular cataract extraction
(ECCE) was performed in 60% of patients, intracapsular cataract extraction
(ICCE) in 31%, and phacoemulsification in 9%. The risk of rehospitalization
for RD within 4 years of ICCE was 1.55% over 1.5 times the risk associated
with ECCE (0.9%). The risk of RD after phacoemulsification was 1.17%.
Cataract surgery accompanied by anterior vitrectomy was associated with
a 5.0%, likelihood of RD at 4 years, which is 4.5 times greater than that
for cataract surgery alone (1.12%). White patients were 1.7 times more
likely to be rehospitalized for RD than were black patients (1.15% versus
0.67%; P less than 0.001). In both races, younger patients were more likely
to be rehospitalized for RD than were older patients (P less than 0.001).
While the increased rate of RD after ICCE versus ECCE confirms previously
held clinical beliefs, the increase in the risk following phacoemulsification
(P less than 0.0001) has not been reported previously.
PMID: 1866143 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]