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Outcomes of pars plana vitrectomy with subretinal tissue plasminogen activator injection and pneumatic displacement of fovea-involving submacular haemorrhage
  1. Carl S Wilkins,
  2. Neesurg Mehta,
  3. Chris Y Wu,
  4. Alexander Barash,
  5. Avnish A Deobhakta,
  6. Richard B Rosen
  1. New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA
  1. Correspondence to Dr Carl S Wilkins; cswilkins013{at}gmail.com

Abstract

Objective Fovea-involving subretinal haemorrhage is challenging to manage with uncertain visual outcomes. We reviewed outcomes of patients with fovea-involving macular haemorrhage treated with pars plana vitrectomy (PPV) and subretinal tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) with pneumatic displacement.

Methods and Analysis This is a retrospective interventional case series. All patients with submacular haemorrhage who underwent PPV with subretinal tPA injection were included. Reasons for exclusion encompassed patients who underwent intravitreal tPA injection in the office without surgery, insufficient follow-up or documentation. Primary outcomes of interest were postoperative visual acuity (VA) at month 1 and 3. Secondary outcomes were median VA at month 3 by location of haemorrhage and underlying diagnosis.

Results Thirty-seven total patients were included. The mean age was 68.2 years, with 54.1% (20/37) females. The most common aetiology was exudative macular degeneration (43.2%), followed by undifferentiated choroidal neovascularisation (CNV) (18.9%), polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (18.9%), traumatic CNV (10.8%), macroaneurysm (5.4%) and proliferative diabetic retinopathy (2.7%). Median preoperative VA was 20/2000, postoperative month 1 was 20/347 (p<0.01), improving to 20/152 (p<0.01) at month 3. Proportion of patients gaining vision 3+ lines in vision was 15/36 (42%). Mean preoperative central subfield thickness on optical coherence tomography was 512.2 µm for sub-retinal pigment epithelium haemorrhage and 648.2 µm for subretinal haemorrhage (p=0.48). Difference in VA by diagnosis was not significant (p=0.60).

Conclusions PPV with subretinal tPA injection and pneumatic displacement of submacular haemorrhage offers modest visual recovery for a diverse group of patients. Location of haemorrhage or specific diagnosis may not predict outcome.

  • macula
  • neovascularisation
  • retina
  • treatment surgery
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Footnotes

  • Presented at Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology Annual Meeting, 20 April 2019, Vancouver, Canada; American Society of Retina Specialists Annual Meeting, July 21 2019, Chicago, Illinois.

  • Contributors The following authors were responsible for data acquisition, analysis and manuscript drafting: CSW, NM, CYW, AB. The following authors were responsible for manuscript drafting and as content guarantors: AAD, RBR. All authors contributed significantly to the preparation of this manuscript.

  • Funding CSW is the recipient of a research grant from the Manhattan Eye Foundation.

  • Competing interests RBR reports consulting fees from Optovue, Boehringer- Ingelheim, NanoRetina, Bayer, Regeneron, CellView, and Astellas. He holds patents with Optovue and has a personal financial interest in Opticology and Guardion Health. None of the other authors report any relevant conflicts or proprietary interest in the results of this study.

  • Patient consent for publication Not required.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Data availability statement Data are available upon request