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Eye (Lond)December 20227 citations

Effect of trabeculectomy on the rate of progression of visual field damage.

Koenig Susanna Friederike, Montesano Giovanni, Fang Clarissa Ern Hui, Crabb David Paul, Jayaram Hari, Clarke Jonathan


AI Summary

This study found trabeculectomy significantly slows the rate of visual field damage progression after surgery. This confirms its clinical benefit in preserving vision for glaucoma patients.

Abstract

Objectives

This study quantifies the effect of trabeculectomy on the rate of progression (RoP) of visual field (VF) damage utilising pre- and post-operative visual function as the outcome instead of surrogate outcomes of success.

Methods

Clinical and VF data from 199 sequential patients who underwent trabeculectomy between 2015 and 2016 were extracted from the network of sites of Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. Of these, we analysed 80 eyes of 74 patients who met our inclusion criteria of at least three reliable VFs before and after surgery (false positive rate <15%). The change in mean RoP (dB/year) was tested using point-wise sensitivity values through a mixed effect model with random effects on both intercepts and slopes. A broken-stick regression of sensitivity over time, with a breakpoint at the day of surgery, modelled the individual change in RoP.

Results

We analysed 10 [9,12] VFs per subject (Median [Interquartile Range]). At surgery, the age was 67 [57, 72] years, mean deviation was -10.84 [-14.7, -5.6] dB and the IOP was 18 [15, 20] mmHg. One year after surgery, the IOP was 10 [8,13] mmHg (p = 0.002). Mean RoP before surgery was -0.94 [-1.20, -0.69] dB/year (Mean [95% credible intervals]) and it was slowed down by 0.62 [0.26, 0.97] dB/year (p < 0.001) after surgery.

Conclusions

Trabeculectomy leads to a significant reduction in the RoP of VF loss postoperatively.


MeSH Terms

HumansVisual FieldsTrabeculectomyIntraocular PressureTonometry, OcularDisease ProgressionRetrospective Studies

Key Concepts4

Trabeculectomy led to a significant reduction in the rate of progression (RoP) of visual field (VF) loss postoperatively, with the mean RoP before surgery being -0.94 [-1.20, -0.69] dB/year (Mean [95% credible intervals]) and slowing down by 0.62 [0.26, 0.97] dB/year (p < 0.001) after surgery.

TreatmentCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=80 eyes of 74 patientsCh6Ch7Ch41

The mean intraocular pressure (IOP) at the time of trabeculectomy surgery was 18 [15, 20] mmHg, which decreased to 10 [8,13] mmHg (p = 0.002) one year after surgery in patients undergoing trabeculectomy.

TreatmentCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=80 eyes of 74 patientsCh3Ch41

At the time of trabeculectomy surgery, the mean deviation (MD) of visual fields was -10.84 [-14.7, -5.6] dB in patients undergoing the procedure.

PrognosisCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=80 eyes of 74 patientsCh6Ch7Ch41

A retrospective cohort study of 80 eyes from 74 patients, who underwent trabeculectomy between 2015 and 2016, analyzed visual field data to quantify the effect of trabeculectomy on the rate of progression of visual field damage.

MethodologyCohortRetrospective Cohort Studyn=80 eyes of 74 patientsCh6Ch7Ch41

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