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Using the West Midlands CONCERT to characterise regional incidence of acute-onset post cataract surgery endophthalmitis

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Whilst research and innovation is embedded within the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) constitution, Doctors-in-training have little opportunity to contribute to designing, leading and recruiting into clinical trials or cohort… Click to show full abstract

Whilst research and innovation is embedded within the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) constitution, Doctors-in-training have little opportunity to contribute to designing, leading and recruiting into clinical trials or cohort studies. We formed the West MidlandsCollaborativeOphthalmologyNetwork forClinicalEffectiveness &Research byTrainees (The West Midlands CONCERT) and undertook a characterisation of post cataract surgery endophthalmitis as a proof-of-concept study to test the feasibility of the CONCERT model. Doctors-in-training formed a collaborative working group to test the concept of delivering a pan-regional clinical effectiveness study across multiple hospital sites by performing retrospective analyses of post cataract endophthalmitis over a 6-year period. Overall, 157,653 cataract surgeries were performed by participating centres accredited to deliver the Royal College of Ophthalmologists training curriculum. Thirty-eight cases of post cataract endophthalmitis were identified, giving an incidence of 2.41 per 10,000 cases (0.0241%). A further 15 endophthalmitis cases presented who had surgery in non-training centres, giving a total of 53 cases. The most common organisms were S. epidermidis (14 (51.9%)) and P. aeruginosa (5 (18.5%)). Anterior-chamber and vitreous sampling yielded positive culture in 33.3% (6/18) and 50.9% (27/53), respectively. At 6 months follow-up, 19 (51.4%) patients achieved visual acuities of ≤0.5 LogMAR. Repeat intravitreal injections (11 (20.8%)) and vitrectomy (n = 22 (41.5%)) were not associated with better outcomes. Using post cataract endophthalmitis as a pilot cohort, this study highlights the feasibility of using the CONCERT model for studies across multiple sites. A UK-CONCERT could provide a powerful infrastructure enabling characterisation of patient cohorts and a platform for high-quality interventional studies, improving patient care.

Keywords: surgery; west midlands; endophthalmitis; post cataract; cataract

Journal Title: Eye
Year Published: 2020

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