Cataract Formation after Bone Marrow Transplantation

  1. Andre Tichelli, MD;
  2. Alois Gratwohl, MD;
  3. Thomas Egger, MD;
  4. Jakob Roth, MD, PhD;
  5. Alexandra Prunte, MD;
  6. Catherine Nissen, MD; and
  7. Bruno Speck, MD
  1. From the University Hospitals, Basel, Switzerland. Requests for Reprints: Andre Tichelli, MD, Hamatologische Abteilung, Departement Innere Medizin, Petersgraben 4, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland. Acknowledgments: The authors thank Anita Nadolny and Ann Barbara Maerki for help in preparing the manuscript. Grant Support: In part by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant 32-31316.91).

    Abstract

    Objective: To evaluate the incidence, time course, and factors associated with cataract formation in bone marrow transplant recipients.

    Design: Prospective cohort study.

    Setting: University Hospitals, Basel, Switzerland.

    Patients: 197 patients treated with allogeneic or autologous bone marrow grafts at least 180 days before the start of the study.

    Intervention: Three regimens for bone marrow transplant were used: 74 patients received single-dose, total-body irradiation (TBI), 90 patients received fractionated TBI, and 33 received chemotherapy alone.

    Results: Three and one half years after single-dose TBI, 51 of the 74 patients (69%) were alive and cataracts had developed in all of these 51 patients. Cataracts developed in 18 of the 90 (20%) patients treated with fractionated TBI, with an 83% (95% CI, 63% to 100%) risk for lens opacification at 6 years\f. Cataracts developed in only 1 of the 33 (3%) patients treated with chemotherapy alone. Incidence of cataracts is higher and lens opacification occurs earlier after single-dose TBI than after fractionated TBI (P < 0.01). With Cox regression analysis, the use of irradiation (relative risk, 21.0), the mode of irradiation (relative risk, 7.4), and the use of steroid treatment (relative risk, 2.9) for more than 3 months after bone marrow transplantation increased the risk for cataract formation. In contrast, age, sex, and chronic graft-versus-host disease did not influence the rate of cataract development. The probability of requiring cataract surgery after 6 years was 85% (CI, 75% to 95%) for the patients treated with single-dose TBI and 20% (CI, 0% to 49%) for those prepared with fractionated irradiation.

    Conclusions: Patients treated with TBI, regardless of fractionation, are likely to have cataracts within 10 years, and some will need surgical repair. Long-term steroid treatment accelerates cataract formation. Preventive measures, such as lens shielding during TBI, should be considered.

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