Purpose: To evaluate macular thickness changes after biaxial microincision versus coaxial small incision cataract surgery using optical coherence tomography (OCT).
Methods: This prospective, randomized, marked study comprised 70 patients (70 eyes) undergoing biaxial microincision surgery or conventional coaxial phacoemulsification. Patients were evaluated by Stratus OCT preoperatively and 1 day, 4 weeks, and 8 weeks postoperatively. Best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), phacoemulsification power, and effective phacoemulsification time (EPT) were evaluated.
Results: In the biaxial group, median foveal thickness changed from 160 microm preoperatively to 168 microm 8 weeks postoperatively (p=0.018), while median macular volume increased from 2.43 mm3 to 2.57 mm3 (p<0.001). In the coaxial group, median foveal thickness increased from 164 microm preoperatively to 170 microm 8 weeks postoperatively (p=0.082), while median macular volume changed from 2.45 mm3 to 2.55 mm3 (p<0.001). No significant differences in the intraindividual increase of foveal thickness and macular volume were found between groups at 8 weeks. A statistically significant difference between groups was found in median foveal thickness at day 1 postoperatively (p=0.027). No significant differences between groups in median macular volume were found at day 1 or at 4 and 8 weeks postoperatively. Median phacoemulsification power was 7.1% and EPT 2.4 seconds in the biaxial group versus 10.6% and 3.2 seconds in the coaxial group (p<0.001 and p=0.078).
Conclusions: No clinically relevant differences in foveal thickness or macular volume were observed after biaxial microincision and coaxial small incision clear corneal cataract surgery. The blood-retinal barrier did not seem to be influenced by either procedure.