Efficacy of topical Bevacizumab in high-risk corneal transplant survival

Bhatti, Nasir and Qidwai, Umair Sheikh Ahmed and Hussain, Munawar and Kazi, Asif (2013) Efficacy of topical Bevacizumab in high-risk corneal transplant survival. Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences, 29 (2). ISSN 1681-715X

[thumbnail of 3089-13796-1-PB.pdf] Text
3089-13796-1-PB.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of topical Bevacizumab in preventing neovascularisation on high risk corneal grafts.

Methodology: This study was a randomized, controlled, parallel group study, carried out from February 2008 to April 2012 (51 months) at Isra Postgraduate Institute of Ophthalmology and Yasin eye hospital, Karachi. Eyes with high risk corneal transplantation with corneal neovascularization were included in this interventional study/randomized clinical trial. Patients were randomly allocated to 2 groups. Group A and Group B. After penetrating keratoplasty, group A patients received topical bevacizumab (2.5%, 25 mg/ml) which was self-administered 4 times a day for 24 week while group B patients received only sham eye drops. Group B was the control group. Corneal neovascular invasion area i.e. the fraction of area on transplanted cornea in which vessels were present was measured using mathematical software program MatLab. Data analyses was done using SPSS version 19. Frequencies of age gender and groups were measured. Neovascular invasion area and change in visual acuity was compared between the 2 groups using paired t test. P value of less than 0.05 was considered significant.

Results: Among the 2 groups mean Corneal neo vascular invasion area was minimum in group A (6.23%) while in group B it was (26.7%). Maximum number of patients (26) attained visual acuity of 6/36 or better in the topical bevacizumab group compared to 17 sham group.

Conclusion: When topical Bevacizumab is used, it reduces the recurrence of neovascularisation and thus helps increasing the frequency of graft survival in cases of high risk corneal transplants.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Euro Archives > Medical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 17 May 2023 04:08
Last Modified: 01 Nov 2023 03:34
URI: http://publish7promo.com/id/eprint/2550

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item