Soefiandi Soedarman
Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Medicine, Indonesia University Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital, Jakarta

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The Effect of Prophylactic Nepafenac 0.1% Eye Drops on Macular Changes after Phacoemulsification in Non- Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy Patients Using Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography (SD-OCT) Soefiandi Soedarman; Ari Djatikusumo; Syska Widyawati; Arini Setiawati
Majalah Oftalmologi Indonesia Vol 41 No 3 (2015): Ophthalmologica Indonesiana
Publisher : The Indonesian Ophthalmologists Association (IOA, Perhimpunan Dokter Spesialis Mata Indonesia (Perdami))

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (331.573 KB) | DOI: 10.35749/journal.v41i3.45

Abstract

Background: To evaluate the effect of prophylactic nepafenac eye drops on macular thickness changes after phacoemulsification surgery in mild to moderate NPDR patients. Method: This study is an open label randomized clinical trial. Thirty-six subjects who met the inclusion criteria underwent phacoemulsification. One group (18 subjects) were given nepafenac 0.1% eye drops and the rest were given placebo. Foveal thickness was measured by SD-OCT before surgery and the fourth week after phacoemulsification. Best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and degree of inflammation in the anterior chamber were also being assessed. Result: There was a statistically significant increase foveal thickness in the placebo group 4 weeks after phacoemulsification (p=0.022). Clinically, percentage degree of inflammation in anterior chamber in placebo group was higher than nepafenac group (38.9% : 5.6%) but not significantly different between 2 groups (p=0.27). Nepafenac group achieved clinically better BCVA than the placebo group 4 weeks after phacoemulsification, although statistically there was no significant difference between 2 groups (p=0.991). Conclusion: Nepafenac 0.1% eye drops could prevent foveal thickening 4 weeks after phacoemulsification in mild to moderate NPDR patients. Clinically, nepafenac 0.1% eye drops could decrease the risk of inflammation in the anterior chamber, risk of CME, and vision deterioration although did not reach statistically significant. Keywords: Nepafenac, macular thickness, phacoemulsification, retinopathy diabetic
The Effect of Prophylactic Nepafenac 0.1% Eye Drops on Macular Changes after Phacoemulsification in Non- Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy Patients Using Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography (SD-OCT) Soefiandi Soedarman; Ari Djatikusumo; Syska Widyawati; Arini Setiawati
Majalah Oftalmologi Indonesia Vol 41 No 3 (2015): Ophthalmologica Indonesiana
Publisher : The Indonesian Ophthalmologists Association (IOA, Perhimpunan Dokter Spesialis Mata Indonesia (Perdami))

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.35749/journal.v41i3.45

Abstract

Background: To evaluate the effect of prophylactic nepafenac eye drops on macular thickness changes after phacoemulsification surgery in mild to moderate NPDR patients. Method: This study is an open label randomized clinical trial. Thirty-six subjects who met the inclusion criteria underwent phacoemulsification. One group (18 subjects) were given nepafenac 0.1% eye drops and the rest were given placebo. Foveal thickness was measured by SD-OCT before surgery and the fourth week after phacoemulsification. Best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and degree of inflammation in the anterior chamber were also being assessed. Result: There was a statistically significant increase foveal thickness in the placebo group 4 weeks after phacoemulsification (p=0.022). Clinically, percentage degree of inflammation in anterior chamber in placebo group was higher than nepafenac group (38.9% : 5.6%) but not significantly different between 2 groups (p=0.27). Nepafenac group achieved clinically better BCVA than the placebo group 4 weeks after phacoemulsification, although statistically there was no significant difference between 2 groups (p=0.991). Conclusion: Nepafenac 0.1% eye drops could prevent foveal thickening 4 weeks after phacoemulsification in mild to moderate NPDR patients. Clinically, nepafenac 0.1% eye drops could decrease the risk of inflammation in the anterior chamber, risk of CME, and vision deterioration although did not reach statistically significant. Keywords: Nepafenac, macular thickness, phacoemulsification, retinopathy diabetic