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img  1:  Interim clinical outcomes in the collaborative bleb-related infection incidence and treatment study.
 
著者: Tetsuya Yamamoto, Yasuaki Kuwayama, Collaborative Bleb-related Infection Incidence and Treatment Study Group
雑誌名: Ophthalmology. 2011 Mar;118(3):453-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2010.07.002. Epub 2010 Oct 8.
Abstract/Text PURPOSE: To introduce the Collaborative Bleb-related Infection Incidence and Treatment Study and to provide an interim, 2.5-year follow-up report of the findings. This prospective study sought to determine the incidence, severity, and prognosis of bleb-related infection and to investigate the efficacy of the antibacterial therapy in preventing it.
DESIGN: Prospective cohort study.
PARTICIPANTS: A total of 908 eyes of 908 glaucoma patients who had undergone mitomycin C-augmented trabeculectomy or trabeculectomy combined with phacoemulsification and intraocular lens implantation performed at 34 clinical centers.
METHODS: Outcomes were measured at 6-month intervals, with special attention to bleb-related infections, and data for 2.5 years of follow-up result were summarized.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The incidence and severity of bleb-related infection.
RESULTS: Of the 908 eyes, 9 eyes developed a bleb-related infection. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis revealed that the probability of development of bleb-related infection was 1.5±0.6% (cumulative probability ± standard error) at the 2.5-year follow in the trabeculectomy cases and 1.4±1.0% in the combined surgery cases. It was 1.5% in both cases with a limbal-based flap and in those with a fornix-based flap. It was significantly different between cases with bleb leakage and those without it (P = 0.037; log-rank test).
CONCLUSIONS: The cumulative probability of bleb-related infection was prospectively determined to be 1.5±0.6% in eyes treated with mitomycin C-augmented trabeculectomy or trabeculectomy combined with phacoemulsification and intraocular lens implantation at the 2.5-year follow-up in the Collaborative Bleb-related Infection Incidence and Treatment Study.

Copyright © 2011 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PMID 20932582  Ophthalmology. 2011 Mar;118(3):453-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2010.07.002. Epub 2010 Oct 8.
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