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Br J OphthalmolDecember 20203 citations

Clinical profile and outcome of early surgery in neonatal-onset glaucoma presenting over a 5-year period.

Kaushik Sushmita, Dhingra Deepika, Arora Atul, Singh Mini P, Kaur Savleen, Joshi Gunjan, Snehi Sagarika, Gupta Gaurav, Pandav Surinder Singh


AI Summary

This study found early surgery for neonatal-onset glaucoma, often non-PCG, can yield good visual and IOP outcomes, emphasizing timely intervention and amblyopia therapy.

Abstract

Background

Neonatal-onset glaucoma (NOG) is a severe form of childhood glaucoma and is not always due to primary congenital glaucoma (PCG). Due to advances in neonatal care, the incidence of NOG is rising, but it remains an under-reported entity. The objective of the paper was to study the clinical profiles, surgical and visual outcomes of NOG at least 1 year following early surgery.

Methods

Prospective interventional cohort study at a tertiary care referral centre. Babies with NOG, who presented between January 2013 and December 2017, had a history suggestive of disease onset within 1 month of birth, and underwent surgery by 3 months of age, were prospectively enrolled. Those who completed a 1-year follow-up after surgery were analysed.

Results

94 eyes of 53 babies were analysed. 35 (66%) had PCG. Neonatal congenital ectropion uveae, congenital rubella syndrome, Peter's anomaly and Sturge-Weber syndrome comprised the non-PCG group. The mean age at presentation and surgery was 24.8±21.9, and 36.7±29.9 days. Additional glaucoma surgery was required in 43 of the 94 eyes (45.7%). PCG had significantly better outcomes than other glaucomas at all time points. 28.3% of eyes had good vision (LogMar (0-0.5)), 34.7% had moderate visual impairment (LogMar 0.7-1.0) and 16% were blind (LogMar <1.62) .

Conclusion

Our study shows that NOG does not always have a dismal prognosis. A small but significant proportion could have other underlying conditions than PCG. Timely surgery and rigorous amblyopia therapy resulted in good outcomes in terms of intraocular pressure control and vision in this cohort.


MeSH Terms

Cohort StudiesFollow-Up StudiesGlaucomaHumansInfantInfant, NewbornIntraocular PressureProspective StudiesRetrospective StudiesTrabeculectomyTreatment Outcome

Key Concepts5

A prospective interventional cohort study at a tertiary care referral center of 94 eyes of 53 babies with neonatal-onset glaucoma (NOG) found that 35 (66%) of the babies had primary congenital glaucoma (PCG).

DiagnosisCohortProspective Cohortn=94 eyes of 53 babies

In a prospective interventional cohort study of 94 eyes of 53 babies with neonatal-onset glaucoma (NOG), the mean age at presentation for NOG was 24.821.9 days and the mean age at surgery was 36.729.9 days.

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohortn=94 eyes of 53 babiesCh43

A prospective interventional cohort study of 94 eyes of 53 babies with neonatal-onset glaucoma (NOG) found that additional glaucoma surgery was required in 43 of the 94 eyes (45.7%).

TreatmentCohortProspective Cohortn=94 eyes of 53 babiesCh43

In a prospective interventional cohort study of 94 eyes of 53 babies with neonatal-onset glaucoma (NOG), primary congenital glaucoma (PCG) had significantly better outcomes than other glaucomas at all time points.

Comparative EffectivenessCohortProspective Cohortn=94 eyes of 53 babies

A prospective interventional cohort study of 94 eyes of 53 babies with neonatal-onset glaucoma (NOG) found that 28.3% of eyes had good vision (LogMar (0-0.5)), 34.7% had moderate visual impairment (LogMar 0.7-1.0), and 16% were blind (LogMar <1.62).

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohortn=94 eyes of 53 babiesCh7

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