Safety and Indicative Effectiveness of Porcine Corneal Lenticular Implants in Patients with Advanced Keratoconus and Post Lasik Ectasia: A Retrospective Clinical Study

Ahmed El-Massry, Osama Ibrahim, Moones Abdalla, Ihab Osman, Shahira Mahmoud Department of Ophthalmology, Alexandria Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria, EgyptCorrespondence: Ahmed El-MassryDepartment of Ophthalmology, Alexandria Faculty of Medicine, Champollion Street, Al Attarin, Alexandria, EgyptTel +...

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Autores principales: El-Massry A, Ibrahim O, Abdalla M, Osman I, Mahmoud S
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/45ffdb79e6794a94b235a5e9a8ab2597
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Sumario:Ahmed El-Massry, Osama Ibrahim, Moones Abdalla, Ihab Osman, Shahira Mahmoud Department of Ophthalmology, Alexandria Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria, EgyptCorrespondence: Ahmed El-MassryDepartment of Ophthalmology, Alexandria Faculty of Medicine, Champollion Street, Al Attarin, Alexandria, EgyptTel +2 0122 215 2435Email ahmad.elmassry@gmail.comPurpose: This study aimed to evaluate the safety and feasibility of implanting decellularized porcine corneal lenticules in a femtosecond laser-assisted pocket for patients with advanced keratoconus and post-Lasik ectasia.Methods: This is a retrospective clinical study of implanting a porcine corneal lenticular implant in seven eyes: six with advanced keratoconus and clear cornea and one with advanced post-Lasik ectasia with a follow-up for 12 months. The lenticules are extracted from porcine tissue, subjected to a decellularization process, intensely cross-linked, sterilized and packed. They are 7 mm in diameter with at 100– 120-micron thickness. The femtosecond laser was used to create an intra-stromal pocket, and then the lenticules were implanted inside the pocket followed by corneal cross-linking 3 months later for six out of seven eyes.Results: Five patients had keratoconus (6 eyes) and one patient (one eye) had post-Lasik ectasia. Visual acuity improved in all patients except for one case at 6 and 12 months and this was statistically significant (P=0.002 and 0.007). At one-year follow-up, the mean central corneal thickness increased from 389.43 ± 45.41 to 429.33± 63.20 μm, the maximum keratometry decreased from 64.8 ± 5.11 to 62.82± 6.16 D, the mean corneal resistance factor (CRT) increased from 5.67 to 8.42, and the total higher-order aberrations decreased from 1.80 to 1.16. Both changes in the CCT and CRF were statistically significant. One eye had wrinkles and opacified graft, and it was exchanged 3 months postoperatively.Conclusion: Porcine corneal lenticules implantation is immunologically safe and well tolerated in patients with advanced keratoconus and post-Lasik ectasia and may be feasible as an alternative to keratoplasty.Keywords: keratoconus, keratoplasty, femtosecond, ectasia