Topical Tacrolimus in the Management of High-Risk Keratoplasty: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abdulmajeed Al Khathami, Ruba A Alamri, Reem A Garah, Rawan S Alsamli, Nourah B Alsheikh, Omar B Alsheikh Alshahrani, Yazeed S AlHoshan, Sarah M Alaklabi, Shaima A Benyh, Abdulrahman Alamri

TL;DR
This study reviews and analyzes the effectiveness of topical tacrolimus in managing high-risk corneal transplants, finding it to be a safe and moderately effective treatment.
Contribution
The study provides a systematic review and meta-analysis confirming topical tacrolimus as a safe and effective treatment for high-risk keratoplasty.
Findings
Topical tacrolimus is the most effective medication for high-risk keratoplasty with a confidence interval of (0.67; 0.42-1.06).
Topical tacrolimus is identified as the safest treatment option for high-risk keratoplasty with a confidence interval of (-0.35; -2.23-0.88).
The study found moderate heterogeneity among included studies, with I² = 52%.
Abstract
Corneal transplantation is a frequently performed procedure for human eye transplants. In low-risk conditions such as keratoconus and Fuch's dystrophy, corneal transplantation has a high success rate due to the immune advantages in support of the cornea. Major risk factors for corneal graft rejection include: atopy, chemical burn, prolonged herpes infection, infectious leukoma, trauma, prior transplantation, active inflammation, and corneal neovascularization. Treatments against lymphangiogenic bacteria and anti-angiogenic bacteria are two strategies to reduce corneal graft rejection. The primary objective of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to assess topical tacrolimus's benefits for high-risk keratoplasty management. In accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, data was gathered by combining pertinent medical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorneal surgery and disorders · Corneal Surgery and Treatments · Ocular Surface and Contact Lens
