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3rd International Congress on Surgery and Anesthesia

September 02 | Virtual Event

Predicting Epiretinal Membrane Recurrence with Intraop Optical Coherence Tomography Biomarkers

Jesse Maynard

Howard University College of Medicine USA, USA

Biography :

Jesse Maynard earned his undergraduate degree from Rutgers University and then spent many years working in the music industry in the U.S. and abroad. He later completed a post-baccalaureate premedical program at California State University and is now a second-year MD candidate at Howard University College of Medicine.

Abstract :

Objective: To correlate epiretinal membrane (ERM) remnants on intraop optical coherence tomography (iOCT) with ERM recurrence and vision following surgical removal.
Methods: Retrospective cohort study of 109 patients who underwent surgery for ERM removal from 2015-2024. Two image readers assessed iOCT images for residual ERM fragments to evaluate recurrence and vision changes at postoperative months 6 and 12. Analyses were performed using Python to calculate Cohen’s kappa (к) for inter-reader agreement, Kolmongorov- Smirnov tests, paired t-tests, two-tailed Fisher’s exact tests, and multivariable logistic regression. Risk ratios (RR), odds ratios (OR), and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were reported. P-values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.
Results: Presence of ERM fragments within 1mm of the foveal center on iOCT was associated with a 1.75-fold increased risk of ERM recurrence after postoperative month 12 (RR = 1.75; 95% CI: 1.24-2.46; p < 0.005). After adjusting for central subfoveal thickness, recurrence risk rose to over fivefold (adjusted OR = 5.25; 95% CI: 1.69-16.24; p < 0.005). ERM recurrence was also associated with reduced visual improvement by postoperative month 12. Patients without recurrence gained 2.41 ± 0.69 lines on the eye chart, while those with recurrence gained only 0.57 ± 0.55 lines (p < 0.046).
Conclusion: Residual ERM fragments within the 1mm foveal zone on iOCT were associated with significantly higher ERM recurrence rates and reduced visual improvement compared to eyes without fragments.