Cataract Surgery in Germany: Data from a German Registry on Quality Outcomes for Cataract and Refractive Surgery in the Year 2018 ()
1. Introduction
A registry is an organized system for the collection, storage, retrieval and analysis of data for individual persons with a particular condition [1]. Through the use of registries, it is possible to increase the value of healthcare and enable medical professionals to identify and share best clinical practices, which could lead to lower costs [2].
A German registry for Cataract Surgery was implemented in 2014, and in 2018, more than 10,000 cataract and refractive lens exchange surgeries were reported in Germany. The exchange of the opacified natural lens by an artificial intraocular lens (IOL) is one of the most frequently performed surgeries worldwide [3]. In the recent past years, the number of available IOL models increased drastically, not only widening the options for patient care, but also the difficulties in the selection of the appropriate IOL for each patient [3].
The German registry was designed according to the proposed outcomes framework for cataract surgery which enables international comparison, helping to improve outcomes [4]. This registry was implemented with the following purposes: benchmarking for surgeons, benchmarking for IOL manufacturers, information of IOL design parameters on visual outcome, information of surgical parameters on visual outcome, fulfillment of medical device resolution requirements with regards to post marketing clinical follow-up, and reference for quality control and benchmarking in Germany.
The main goal of this project was to improve the treatment and standards of care for cataract and refractive surgery in Germany and to offer a tool for benchmarking through the establishment of a reference database in Germany where surgeons could record and analyze their own outcomes. To our best knowledge, this is the first registry on cataract surgery based solely on German data.
The purpose of this paper is to report the results of the German Cataract surgery database from the year 2018.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Patients and Assessments
The Annual Report on Cataract Surgery Germany (ARCSG) started in 2014. Ophthalmic surgeons across Germany were invited to contribute data on their cataract surgeries. Data collection includes data in quality control and benchmark tools on preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative parameters. In all the surgeries, the type of IOL was documented and consequently parameters as optic design, size, edge design, haptic design and material are available.
The data presented here have been derived from the German registry for Cataract Surgery. Data have been entered into the system from January 2, 2018, and were included in the analysis, reporting data in 2018.
2.2. Statistical Analysis
Results are reported as percentages with 95% Confidence Interval (95%CI) or as mean ± standard deviation (SD).
3. Results
The German registry included a total of 10,035 lens exchange surgeries (cataract and clear lens exchange) in 2018. Complete follow-up data were available for 9,882 lens extractions and the mean time from date of surgery to data of follow-up was 30 days.
3.1. Preoperative Parameters
Of the total included patients, 57.9% were females. Regarding age groups, more than one third of the patients belonged to the age group between 76 - 80 years old, followed by the age group 71 - 75 years old with approximately 23% of operated patients in 2018 (Figure 1).
The preoperative corrected distance visual acuity (CDVA) was 0.5 (10/20) or better in 60.6% of the cases. CDVA was 0.1 (6/60) or worse in 6.4% of all the cases. The values of preoperative axial length varied between 19.09 mm and 29.99 mm with a mean ± SD of 23.41 ± 1.19 mm. The range of anterior chamber depth was 1.56 - 5.63 mm with a mean ± SD of 3.08 ± 0.42 mm.
Approximately 64% of the patients undergoing lens exchange surgeries had some ocular comorbidities: 9.7% had glaucoma, 10.9% maculopathy, 1.0% diabetic retinopathy, 0.9% amblyopia and 41.7% had another ocular disease.
3.2. Intraoperative Parameters
The main type of anesthesia reported was peribulbar anesthesia in 60.4% of the cases. Retrobulbar anesthesia was used in 22.4% of the cases and drip anesthesia was applied in 15.6% of the surgeries.
Figure 1. Percentage of the operated patients in the different age groups.
In the majority of cases, 96.2%, the chosen method of surgery was phacoemulsification with implantation of a posterior chamber IOL. The other reported surgical methods were femtosecond laser-assisted cataract extraction (3.6%), planned extracapsular cataract extraction (0.03%) and other type of surgeries (0.12%). A sulcus implantation was performed in 0.33% of the cases and an anterior chamber IOL was implanted in 0.05% of the surgeries.
The type of incision performed during surgery for lens exchange varied. In most of the cases, 76.4%, clear cornea incisions were reported, followed by corneoscleral (18.2%), limbal (5.3%), being clear cornea/limbal incisions the less frequently reported type of incision (0.1%).
Percentages of implanted IOL power are shown in Figure 2. In 29.4% of the eyes, the power of implanted IOL was between 21.0 - 22.9 D. Aspheric IOLs were implanted in 67.8% of the eyes and 411 (5%) natural lenses were replaced by IOLs with additional features: toric IOLs in 247 eyes, multifocal IOLs (diffractive, multifocal and trifocal) in 141 eyes and toric multifocal IOLs in 23 eyes.
Surgeons reported intraoperative difficulties in 12.6% of the surgeries: narrow pupil in 7.5%, shallow anterior chamber in 3.3%, mature cataract in 1.4%, previous retinal surgery in 0.3% and previous vitrectomy in 0.1%. Beyond these difficulties, surgical complications have also been reported. These complications were only reported in 413 cases and included posterior capsule rupture with or without vitreous loss, dropped nucleus, damage, prolapse or trauma of the iris.
Figure 2. Power of the implanted IOLs shown as percentages.
3.3. Postoperative Data (Outcome at Follow-Up Visits)
Figure 3 shows the percentages of eyes reaching different levels of CDVA (decimal) preoperatively and at the last postoperative visit. A CDVA of 1.0 (6/6) or better at the last follow-up visit was achieved by 42.9% (95%CI 42.0 - 43.8) of all reported cases. A CDVA of 0.5 (6/12) or better was achieved by 90.8% (95%CI 90.2 - 91.3) of all cases.
The evolution of sphere, cylinder and residual refractive error (SEQ) preoperatively and at each postoperative visit is shown in Figure 4. The mean ± SD of SEQ was −0.13 ± 0.83 D and the absolute mean ± SD of SEQ was 0.52 ± 0.66D.
Figure 3. Percentage of eyes reaching different levels of CDVA (decimal). Preop—preoperative; postop—last postoperative visit.
Figure 4. Evolution of sphere, cylinder and residual refractive error at preoperative and at each postoperative visit.
When comparing the targeted and achieved spherical equivalent, approximately 64% of the evaluated eyes had a residual refractive error within ±0.50D (95%CI 63.2 - 65.1) and 89.9% were within ±1.0D (95%CI 89.3 - 90.5). Approximately 10% of the evaluated eyes had a residual refractive error greater than 1.00D (Figure 5).
The reported postoperative complication rate was very low during the follow-up period: in 25 cases there was a persistent corneal edema and an uncontrolled elevated intraocular pressure was reported in 22 cases. Endophthalmitis occurred in three cases.
4. Discussion
The number of registries in ophthalmology has increased over the last years. A recently published review paper [1] identified 97 clinical eye registries and 8 of them included data regarding cataract extraction or refractive surgery; three of these registries are data from pediatric cataract [4] - [11]. Apart from the German registry presented in this paper, there are three more national databases originated in India (Aravind Eye Hospital cataract registry) [12], Malaysia (Malaysian National Cataract registry) [11] and Sweden (Swedish National Cataract Register) [8]. There are also two multinational registries: EUREQUO, comprising 18 European countries and Australia [5] [13]. The National Eyecare Outcomes Network (NEON), which originated in the USA, is a multinational registry that includes 32 states from the USA, Australia, France, Trinidad and Tobago [7]. From these databases, the Swedish register was the first to be implemented in 1992, followed by the USA register that started in 1996. Visual acuity is a parameter evaluated by all the registries [1].
Comparing the mean age of patients undergoing cataract surgery, the available data show that 70 years is the approximately reported mean age, with the
Figure 5. Percentage of patients with different levels of residual refractive error.
exception of the Malaysian database that reported a mean age of 64 years [5] [7] [8] [11] [12] [14]. Another consistent fact is the percentage of women, approximately 60% [7] [11], which could be related to age: due to the longer life expectancy of women, the dominance of females is expectable [13].
There are different types of anesthesia used for cataract extraction. In the report of the two years’ experience of the National Eyecare Outcomes Network Cataract Surgery Database in 2000, retrobulbar anesthesia was the most frequently used type of anesthesia [7] whilst in the Indian database, all the surgeries were performed under topic or retrobulbar anesthesia [12]. In the Swedish database, the type of anesthesia was not included in the report since almost all surgeries were performed under topical anesthesia. In the EUREQUO database, topical anesthesia was the most frequent (37.9%), followed by sub-tenon (26.2%) and retrobulbar (18.3%) [13]. The frequencies of used anesthetic techniques vary among the different databases, which is in accordance with what was reported in EUREQUO: a significant variation in the anesthetic techniques among the different clinics [13].
In our study, phacoemulsification was the surgical technique performed in almost all of the cases (96.2%), which is very similar to the reports from other databases: 99.5% in EUREQUO [13] and 92.3% in NEON [7]. On the contrary, in India, the rate of phacoemulsification is much lower, only 26% [12].
Although femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery was only used in 3.6% of the surgeries in our report, it was the second most frequently used technique. Femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery was used in cataract surgery for the first time in 2008, with the expectation that it would yield superior outcomes compared to phacoemulsification surgery. Both techniques, phacoemulsification and femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgery, appear to be safe and effective and there are a significant number of surgeons worldwide that do not consider the latter approach to be more beneficial or cost-effective [15] [16]. However, more recent data from EUREQUO showed that, in 3379 cases of femtosecond laser-assisted cataract surgeries, visual and refractive outcomes of patients treated with this technique were more favorable compared to manual phacoemulsification [17].
A crucial issue in cataract surgery is the accurate calculation of the IOL power. The expectations of patients to be spectacle-free have been increasing steadily over the last years, with patients being more demanding regarding their outcomes after surgery. Although different mathematical formulas have been developed for IOL power calculation, resulting in more precise refractive outcomes [18], this issue is far from being solved. Cataract surgeons constantly evaluate the outcomes after surgery for a more personalized lens calculation formula to achieve better visual and refractive outcomes [3] [19].
Our data revealed a complete follow-up for 9882 lens extractions. Visual and refractive outcomes are the ones that will allow comparing our results to other reported results as a measure of quality control. In fact, an alignment of outcome measures for cataract surgery is crucial for comparison across contexts [4].
With a mean follow-up of 30 days, our results are comparable to those described in other published databases. Concerning CDVA, 90.8% of our patients achieved a post-operative CDVA of 0.5 (decimal). Eighty-nine percent of the NEON patients achieved a best corrected visual acuity of 0.5 (decimal) [7]. In the Indian database, approximately 90% of the patients that underwent cataract surgery achieved a 1 month post-operative CDVA of at least 0.5 (decimal) [12]. In the EUREQUO database, 94.4% of operated eyes achieved a CDVA of 0.5 (decimal) or better between 7 - 60 days after surgery. The same database reported 97.2% in cases of no ocular comorbidities [13] [20].
Regarding refractive outcomes, in 49% of the NEON patients, the difference between the target and the achieved spherical equivalent was within 0.5D and 29% was between 0.5 and 1.0D [7]. The EUREQUO database reported a mean prediction error of 0.55D [13], which is very similar to our results. Our results also show that 64.1% of the patients have a refractive error within ±0.5D and 89.9% of the patients have a refractive error within ±1.0D, which is considered to be a good outcome [18]. Thus, the outcomes reported in our German registry can be considered as good and realistic, according to what is expected from patients with these characteristics and subject to lens exchange surgery.
5. Limitations
This type of registry is not mandatory in Germany and any standardization of this type of study does not exist. Therefore, our data might not represent the “real-world” in Germany. Other limitations are the unstructured selection of documenting doctors, and the short mean follow-up time, reporting only 1-year data.
6. Conclusion
Our preoperative, intraoperative, visual and refractive outcomes from surgeries in Germany are comparable to the ones reported in other registries, namely EUREQUO, which is the registry with the most recent data and with a closer geographic location to ours.