Ocular Antihypertensive Medication Use After iStent Implantation Concurrent With Cataract Surgery vs Cataract Surgery Alone in a Large US Health Care Claims Database.
Wang Sophia Y, Singh Kuldev, Stein Joshua D, Chang Robert T
AI Summary
This study found iStent implantation with cataract surgery significantly reduced glaucoma medication use compared to cataract surgery alone. This lessens medication burden, potentially improving patient adherence and outcomes.
Abstract
Importance
The iStent Trabecular Micro-Bypass (Glaukos Corporation) is a minimally invasive glaucoma implant used in conjunction with cataract surgery to lower intraocular pressure.
Objective
To determine whether implantation of the iStent concurrent with cataract surgery is associated with reduced use of ocular antihypertensive medications in a US health care claims database.
Design, setting, and participants: Retrospective, observational longitudinal cohort study of individuals enrolled in a US managed care network who underwent iStent implantation with cataract surgery (iStent/CEIOL) from 2012 to 2016 (n = 1509 bilateral and n = 1462 unilateral surgery). A control group of individuals who underwent bilateral cataract surgery only (CEIOL) were matched 1:1 to patients undergoing bilateral iStent/CEIOL on baseline demographic and clinical factors. Data were analyzed between November 1, 2017, and January 31, 2018.
Main outcomes and measures: The number of topical ocular antihypertensive agents used postoperatively by patients undergoing iStent/CEIOL compared with baseline and with matched CEIOL control individuals, and hazard ratios with 95% confidence intervals for sustained reduced use of at least 1 topical ocular antihypertensive agent postoperatively.
Results
Of the 2971 eligible enrollees, mean age at first surgery was 74.3 years, and 1659 (55.8%) were women. Patients undergoing iStent/CEIOL had diagnoses that included primary open-angle glaucoma (n = 2329; 78.4%), narrow angles (n = 381; 12.8%), and secondary glaucomas (n = 261; 8.8%). At baseline, 1223 (41.2%) were receiving no topical glaucoma agents; 876 (29.5%), 437 (14.7%), and 435 (14.6%) were receiving 1, 2, or at least 3 agents, respectively. Although only 678 persons (22.8%) completed at least 2 years of postoperative follow-up, the proportion of patients receiving no drops increased postoperatively (64.7%, 20-24 months, P < .001, χ2). Patients receiving at least 1 topical agent at baseline had mean reduction of 1.01 and 0.61 medications used at 20 to 24 months with bilateral or unilateral surgery, respectively (both P < .001, paired t). Sustained reduction in glaucoma medication use was more likely in patients receiving at least 3 vs 1 medication at baseline (hazard ratio, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.36-2.09). Compared with matched control individuals undergoing CEIOL, patients undergoing bilateral iStent/CEIOL had a greater mean reduction in drops used (0.99 vs 0.49; postoperative month 20-24; P < .001; paired t) and a higher proportion receiving no drops postoperatively (73.5% vs 55.3%, postoperative month 20-24; P < .001; χ2).
Conclusions and relevance: Implantation of the iStent trabecular micro-bypass stent concurrent with cataract surgery was associated with moderately reduced use of topical ocular antihypertensive medication. Reduction in the use of glaucoma medications may lessen the burden of medication adverse effects and promote better adherence.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts5
Implantation of the iStent trabecular micro-bypass stent concurrent with cataract surgery (iStent/CEIOL) was associated with a greater mean reduction in topical ocular antihypertensive medications used (0.99 vs 0.49; postoperative month 20-24; P < .001; paired t) compared with matched control individuals undergoing cataract surgery only (CEIOL) in a retrospective, observational longitudinal cohort study.
Patients undergoing bilateral iStent trabecular micro-bypass stent implantation concurrent with cataract surgery (iStent/CEIOL) had a higher proportion receiving no topical ocular antihypertensive drops postoperatively (73.5% vs 55.3%, postoperative month 20-24; P < .001; χ2) compared with matched control individuals undergoing cataract surgery only (CEIOL) in a retrospective, observational longitudinal cohort study.
Patients receiving at least 1 topical ocular antihypertensive agent at baseline who underwent iStent trabecular micro-bypass stent implantation concurrent with cataract surgery had a mean reduction of 1.01 medications used at 20 to 24 months with bilateral surgery and 0.61 medications with unilateral surgery (both P < .001, paired t) in a retrospective, observational longitudinal cohort study.
Sustained reduction in glaucoma medication use after iStent trabecular micro-bypass stent implantation concurrent with cataract surgery was more likely in patients receiving at least 3 vs 1 medication at baseline (hazard ratio, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.36-2.09) in a retrospective, observational longitudinal cohort study.
The proportion of patients receiving no topical ocular antihypertensive drops increased postoperatively (64.7% at 20-24 months, P < .001, χ2) after iStent trabecular micro-bypass stent implantation concurrent with cataract surgery in a retrospective, observational longitudinal cohort study of 2971 eligible enrollees.
Related Articles5
Changes in Ocular Hypotensive Drug Usage for Glaucoma Treatment After Cataract Surgery: A Nationwide Population-based Study in Taiwan.
Cohort StudyPatients' Acceptance of Glaucoma Therapy in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Cross-Sectional StudyESCRS Clinical Trends Survey 2016-2021: 6-year assessment of practice patterns among society delegates.
Cross-Sectional StudyPreservative-free versus preserved glaucoma eye drops and occurrence of glaucoma surgery. A retrospective study based on the French national health insurance information system, 2008-2016.
Cohort StudyGlaucoma Care of Prison Inmates at an Academic Hospital.
Cohort StudyIs this article assigned to the wrong chapter(s)? Let us know.