Source
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
Abstract
PURPOSE:
To assess the impact of duration of topical steroid treatment on the incidence of endothelial graft rejection after normal-risk penetrating keratoplasty (PK).
DESIGN:
Prospective, institutional, longitudinal, randomized interventional trial including 406 eyes (age 52 +/- 19 years; follow-up 42 +/- 18 months).
METHODS:
Postoperative treatment started with prednisolone acetate 1% eye drops five times daily and was tapered over the first six months. Patients were then randomized into either short-term (stop topical steroid treatment) or long-term treatment (continue steroids once daily for 12 months).
RESULTS:
During follow-up, 29 eyes (7.1%) developed an episode of endothelial graft rejection. Graft rejections were significantly more common in the short-term (19 of 202; 9.1%) compared with the long-term treatment group (10 of 204: 4.9%; P = .001).
CONCLUSIONS:
Long-term, low-dose topical steroid treatment protects against immunologic graft rejections.