To determine the prognostic factors of primary anatomical success after microincisional vitrectomy for rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD).
MethodsThe medical records of 206 eyes treated with microincisional vitrectomy for RRD from 2009 to 2014 were retrospectively reviewed. The preoperative factors (best corrected visual acuity, break sites, number of breaks, break size, extent of retinal detachment, high myopia, lens status) and intraoperative factors (combined cataract surgery, vitrectomy machine, tamponade, sclerotomy size) were investigated to determine correlations with primary anatomical success.
ResultsOf the 206 eyes, 198 eyes (96.1%) were reattached after primary vitrectomy; 46 eyes of 48 eyes with inferior breaks (95.8%, p = 1.000), 42 eyes of 44 pseudophakic eyes (95.5%, p = 1.000), 84 eyes of 89 eyes with multiple breaks (95.4%, p = 0.296). All 39 eyes using air tamponade (100%, p = 0.224) were reattached and there was no significant correlation with primary anatomical success. Conversely, 44 eyes of 49 eyes with high myopia (89.8%) were reattached after primary surgery, which was lower than non-high myopic eyes (98.1%, p = 0.028). Multivariate logistic regression showed that high myopia was an independent factor for primary reattachment failure (odds ratio = 5.795, 95% confidence interval = 1.332–25.208, p = 0.019).
ConclusionsMicroincisional vitrectomy for RRD showed a high reattachment rate regardless of break site and number, lens status, or tamponade type. However, primary reattachment failure was relatively common in high myopia patients, thus, meticulous care is required.