Visual acuity following cataract surgeries in relation to preoperative appropriateness ratings

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Abstract

The authors initiated this study to consider if the formal preoperative assessment of appropriate or inappropriate utilization of cataract surgery by an expert panel could predict post-operative improvement or decline in visual acuity. They evaluated the association between ratings of appropriateness, as determined by the RAND-UCLA method, and measurements of postoperative visual acuity using Fisher's exact tests for tables greater than 2 x 2. For 768 patients, improvement of at least 2 Snellen chart lines occurred in 89% of surgeries rated as appropriate or appropriate and crucial, 68% rated as uncertain, and 36% rated as inappropriate (P < 0.0001, Fisher's exact test). These results provide evidence supporting the validity of the RAND-UCLA method to assess the appropriateness of surgery.

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Tobacman, J. K., Zimmerman, B., Lee, P., Hilborne, L., Kolder, H., & Brook, R. H. (2003). Visual acuity following cataract surgeries in relation to preoperative appropriateness ratings. Medical Decision Making, 23(2), 122–130. https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989X03251241

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