Safety of intraoperative autologous plasma incubation of corneal grafts for reducing endothelial cell loss: a pilot study
Carolina Mercado, Cesar Hernández, Carolina Lopez-Rojas, Borja De La Sen-Corcuera, Eduardo Anitua, José Ignacio Barraquer, Angela Gutiérrez, Ernesto Otero, Alfonso L. Sabater

TL;DR
This pilot study explores the safety and effectiveness of using a patient's own plasma during corneal transplants to reduce cell loss and improve outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel intraoperative use of autologous plasma products to mitigate endothelial cell loss in corneal grafts.
Findings
APP treatment was safe with no adverse events recorded in patients undergoing corneal transplants.
APP groups showed significantly lower endothelial cell loss and better corneal cell hexagonality compared to controls.
PRGF-Endoret treatment showed consistent ECL reduction at multiple postoperative time points.
Abstract
Corneal endothelial cell loss contributes to transplant failure. Autologous plasma products (APP) activate salvaging pathways that can prevent oxidative stress perioperatively. This study aimed to evaluate the safety of intraoperative incubation of full-thickness corneal grafts in platelet-rich plasma (aPRP) and plasma rich in growth factors (PRGF-Endoret) in mitigating postoperative corneal endothelial cell loss (ECL). Pilot study including patients undergoing penetrating keratoplasty (PK) for various indications between June 2021 and December 2022. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either aPRP or PRGF-Endoret incubation, while those who declined intervention served as the control group. Demographic and clinical data were collected, including preoperative and postoperative endothelial cell count, intraocular pressure, pachymetry, and adverse reactions. Thirty individuals who…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorneal surgery and disorders · Corneal Surgery and Treatments · Glaucoma and retinal disorders
