Purpose: Evaluate macular features on preoperative ocular coherence tomography as indicators of postoperative visual gain following vitrectomy for epiretinal membrane (ERM).
Methods: A retrospective chart review of 66 eyes that underwent vitrectomy with membrane and internal limiting membrane peeling for symptomatic ERM. Inclusion criteria required a pre-op visual acuity of at least 20/200 and minimum follow-up of 1 year. In addition, 31 of these eyes with complete 5-line raster pre-op ocular coherence tomography had segmentation analysis which included noncentral ERM to inner nuclear layer and ERM to outer plexiform layer measurements.
Results: Eyes with "domed" pre-op macular contour had a mean preoperative acuity of 20/70 and gained a mean 2.4 lines at one year, compared with those with "flat" or "depressed" macular contour, having a 20/60 mean preoperative acuity and 0.6 lines gained (P = 0.02). Changes for other ocular coherence tomography features examined were not statistically significant. Paracentral ERM to inner nuclear layer measurements had moderate correlation, whereas paracentral ERM to outer plexiform layer measurements had weak correlation with gain in visual acuity.
Conclusion: An inner macular-domed contour in eyes with ERM predicted better visual gain after vitrectomy with ERM and internal limiting membrane peeling compared with a flat or depressed contour.