Keay Lisa, Lindsley Kristina, Tielsch James, Katz Joanne, Schein Oliver
The George Institute for Global Health, The University of Sydney, Level 24, Maritime Trade Towers, 207 Kent Street, Sydney, NSW, Australia, 2000.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Jan 8;1(1):CD007293. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007293.pub4.
Cataract surgery is practiced widely, and substantial resources are committed to an increasing cataract surgical rate in low- and middle-income countries. With the current volume of cataract surgery and future increases, it is critical to optimize the safety and cost-effectiveness of this procedure. Most cataracts are performed on older individuals with correspondingly high systemic and ocular comorbidities. It is likely that routine preoperative medical testing will detect medical conditions, but it is questionable whether these conditions should preclude individuals from cataract surgery or change their perioperative management.
We included randomized clinical trials in which routine preoperative medical testing was compared to no preoperative or selective preoperative testing prior to age-related cataract surgery.
Two review authors independently assessed abstracts to identify possible trials for inclusion. For each included study, two review authors independently documented study characteristics, extracted data, and assessed risk of bias.
We identified three randomized clinical trials that compared routine preoperative medical testing versus selective or no preoperative testing for 21,531 cataract surgeries. The largest trial, in which 19,557 surgeries were randomized, was conducted in Canada and the USA. Another study was conducted in Brazil and the third in Italy. Although the studies had some issues with respect to performance and detection bias due to lack of masking (high risk for one study, unclear for two studies), we assessed the studies as at overall low risk of bias.The three randomized clinical trials included in this review reported results for 21,531 total cataract surgeries with 707 total surgery-associated medical adverse events, including 61 hospitalizations and three deaths. Of the 707 medical adverse events reported, 353 occurred in the pre-testing group and 354 occurred in the no-testing group (odds ratio (OR) 1.00, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.86 to 1.16; high-certainty evidence). Most events were cardiovascular and occurred during the intraoperative period. Routine preoperative medical testing did not reduce the risk of intraoperative (OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.71 to 1.38) or postoperative ocular adverse events (OR 1.11, 95% CI 0.74 to 1.67) when compared to selective or no testing (2 studies; 2281 cataract surgeries; moderate-certainty evidence). One study evaluated cost savings, estimating the costs to be 2.55 times higher in those with preoperative medical testing compared to those without preoperative medical testing (1 study; 1005 cataract surgeries; moderate-certainty evidence). There was no difference in cancellation of surgery between those with preoperative medical testing and those with selective or no preoperative testing, reported by two studies with 20,582 cataract surgeries (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.78 to 1.21; high-certainty evidence). No study reported outcomes related to clinical management changes (other than cancellation) or quality of life scores.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This review has shown that routine preoperative testing does not increase the safety of cataract surgery. Alternatives to routine preoperative medical testing have been proposed, including self administered health questionnaires, which could substitute for health provider histories and physical examinations. Such avenues may lead to cost-effective means of identifying those at increased risk of medical adverse events due to cataract surgery. However, despite the rare occurrence, adverse medical events precipitated by cataract surgery remain a concern because of the large number of elderly patients with multiple medical comorbidities who have cataract surgery in various settings. The studies summarized in this review should assist recommendations for the standard of care of cataract surgery, at least in low- and middle-income settings. Unfortunately, in these settings, medical history questionnaires may be useless to screen for risk because few people have ever been to a physician, let alone been diagnosed with any chronic disease.
白内障手术广泛开展,中低收入国家投入大量资源以提高白内障手术率。鉴于当前白内障手术量及未来的增长趋势,优化该手术的安全性和成本效益至关重要。大多数白内障手术针对的是患有相应高全身性和眼部合并症的老年人。常规术前医学检查可能会发现一些疾病状况,但这些状况是否应排除患者进行白内障手术或改变其围手术期管理仍存在疑问。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)(其中包含Cochrane眼科和视力试验注册库)(2018年第6期);Ovid MEDLINE;Embase.com;PubMed;LILACS BIREME、对照试验元注册库(mRCT)(最后检索时间为2012年1月5日);ClinicalTrials.gov和世界卫生组织国际临床试验平台。检索日期为2018年6月29日,mRCT除外,该库已停止服务。我们检索了纳入研究报告的参考文献以获取其他相关研究,对语言或出版日期无限制。
我们纳入了随机临床试验,这些试验将年龄相关性白内障手术前的常规术前医学检查与无术前检查或选择性术前检查进行了比较。
两位综述作者独立评估摘要以确定可能纳入的试验。对于每项纳入研究,两位综述作者独立记录研究特征、提取数据并评估偏倚风险。
我们确定了三项随机临床试验,这些试验比较了21,531例白内障手术的常规术前医学检查与选择性或无术前检查。最大的试验在加拿大和美国进行,随机分配了19,557例手术。另一项研究在巴西进行第三项在意大利进行。尽管由于缺乏设盲,这些研究在实施和检测偏倚方面存在一些问题(一项研究为高风险,两项研究为不清楚),但我们将这些研究整体评估为低偏倚风险。本综述纳入的三项随机临床试验报告了21,531例白内障手术的结果,共有707例与手术相关的医学不良事件,包括61例住院和3例死亡。在报告的707例医学不良事件中,353例发生在预检查组;354例发生在无检查组(比值比(OR)1.00,95%置信区间(CI)0.86至1.16;高确定性证据)。大多数事件为心血管事件,且发生在术中。与选择性或无检查相比,常规术前医学检查并未降低术中(OR = 0.99,95% CI 0.71至1.38)或术后眼部不良事件的风险(OR = 1.11,95% CI 0.74至1.67)(2项研究;2281例白内障手术;中度确定性证据)。一项研究评估了成本节约情况,估计术前进行医学检查的患者成本比未进行术前医学检查的患者高2.55倍(1项研究;1005例白内障手术;中度确定性证据)。两项涉及20,582例白内障手术的研究报告,术前医学检查患者与选择性或无术前检查患者在手术取消率方面无差异(OR = 0.97,95% CI 0.78至1.21;高确定性证据)。没有研究报告与临床管理变化(除取消手术外)或生活质量评分相关的结果。
本综述表明,常规术前检查不会提高白内障手术的安全性。已提出常规术前医学检查的替代方法,包括自我管理的健康问卷,其可替代医疗服务提供者的病史询问和体格检查。这些途径可能会带来具有成本效益的方法,以识别因白内障手术而发生医学不良事件风险增加的人群。然而,尽管白内障手术引发的不良医学事件很少见,但由于大量患有多种医学合并症的老年患者在不同环境中接受白内障手术,这些事件仍然令人担忧。本综述总结的研究应有助于为白内障手术的护理标准提供建议,至少在中低收入环境中如此。不幸的是,在这些环境中,病史问卷可能无法用于筛查风险,因为很少有人看过医生,更不用说被诊断患有任何慢性病了。