Background
Accompanying the patient recruitment within the “Scleral buckling versus primary vitrectomy in rhegmatogenous retinal detachment
multicentre trial (SPR)”, all patients with primary rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD) had to be documented in a detailed
recruitment list. The main goal of this analysis was to estimate the prevalence of “medium-severe” RRD (SPR Study eligible)
as defined by the SPR Study inclusion criteria. In addition, the detailed anatomical situation of medium-severe RRD is investigated.
Methods
SPR Study recruitment was evaluated via a standardised questionnaire, which contained a coloured fundus drawing and information
regarding possible reasons for exclusion from the SPR Study in each case. A team of three experienced vitreoretinal surgeons
evaluated all fundus drawings from a 1-year period. The review led to a decision on SPR Study eligibility on the pure basis
of anatomical assessment. The main outcome measures were assessment of feasible inclusion into the SPR Study by the evaluation
team based on the fundus drawing and anatomical details.
Results
A total of 1,115 patients with RRD from 13 European centres were prospectively enrolled in the year 2000. The quality of the
drawings sufficed for assessment in 1,107 cases (99.3%). Three hundred and twelve fundus drawings (28.2%) met the anatomic
inclusion criteria of the SPR Study. RRD of medium severity is characterised by an average number of 2.6 (SD 2.4) retinal
breaks, 5.8 (SD 2.8) clock hours of detached retina, unclear hole situation in 15.1% of cases (n=47), attached macula in 42.9% (n=134), bullous detachment in 15.1% (n=47) and vitreous haemorrhage/opacity in 7.7% (n=24).
Conclusions
In the recruitment lists of the SPR Study of the year 2000, RRD of medium severity was present in nearly one third of the
patients with primary RRD. These findings emphasise the clinical relevance of the SPR Study.
Keywords Retinal detachment - Scleral buckling - Pars plana vitrectomy - Recruitment - SPR
This work was in part presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO),
Fort Lauderdale, May 2005; at the Deutsche Retinologische Gesellschaft, Bern, June 2005; and at the Deutsche Ophthalmologische
Gesellschaft /Societas Ophthalmologica Europaea, Berlin, September 2005.