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Topical corticosteroids with topical cyclosporine A versus topical corticosteroids alone for immunological corneal graft rejection

Raquel Marques, Inês Leal, Paulo Silva Guerra, Rafael Correia Barão, Ana Quintas, Walter Martins Rodrigues

2021European Journal of Ophthalmology11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the efficacy and safety of supplementing topical cyclosporine A (CsA) to topical corticosteroids (CS), in the prophylaxis and treatment of corneal graft rejection following penetrating keratoplasty (PK). Methods: Meta-analysis. Search was performed in PubMed, CENTRAL, ClinicalTrials.gov, reference lists of articles and conference proceedings. Primary outcomes: 1-year rejection-free survival rate (prophylaxis); resolution rate of rejection episodes (treatment). Secondary outcomes: 6- and 24-month rejection-free graft survival rate, number of rejection episodes during follow-up, time-to-resolution of rejection episode, 12- and 24-months graft survival rate, adverse events. Subgroup analyses were planned for high-risk grafts; primary vs. secondary prophylaxis of graft rejection episodes; and CsA concentrations of 0.05%, 1%, and 2%. Results: Five studies of moderate methodological quality were included (one retrospective, four RCT), assessing 459 eyes (CS + CsA 226, CS 233). In the prophylaxis setting, supplemental CsA was associated with a higher rejection-free survival rate at 12-months (RR 1.25, 95% CI: 1.00–1.56, p = 0.05) and 24-months post-PK (RR 1.56, 95% CI: 1.15–2.11, p < 0.01), though no differences were found at the 6-months timepoint ( p = 0.93). This effect was mostly verified using CsA 2% in the high-risk subset of patients. In the treatment setting, no differences were found in the resolution rate of rejection episodes ( p = 0.23). No differences existed on drug-related adverse events. Conclusion: In the prophylaxis of rejection episodes post-PK, the combined regimen of CS + CsA was associated with a higher 1- and 2-year rejection-free graft survival rate. Subgroup analysis mostly supported the use of CsA 2% for high-risk grafts. Further studies are needed to validate these results.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAdverse effectRegimenRelative riskRandomized controlled trialCiclosporinSurgeryRetrospective cohort studyInternal medicineTransplantationConfidence intervalCorneal surgery and disordersCorneal Surgery and TreatmentsOcular Surface and Contact Lens
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