The Role of Intraocular Pressure and Systemic Hypertension in the Progression of Glaucomatous Damage to the Macula.
Chang Angela Y, Tsamis Emmanouil, Blumberg Dana M, Al-Aswad Lama A, Cioffi George A, Hood Donald C, Liebmann Jeffrey M, De Moraes C G
AI Summary
Macular OCT and visual field parameters better reflect IOP-related glaucoma progression than conventional measures. Systemic hypertension was not linked to progression in this study, highlighting macular metrics as sensitive endpoints.
Abstract
Prcis: Macular structural and functional parameters were better correlated with pressure-dependent glaucomatous damage than conventional parameters. Self-reported systemic hypertension (HTN) was not associated with structural or functional progression in this cohort.
Purpose
The aim was to examine the relationships between intraocular pressure (IOP), systemic HTN, and glaucoma progression using structural testing with optical coherence tomography (OCT) and functional testing with visual field (VF).
Patients and methods: A total of 191 eyes of 119 patients enrolled in a prospective, longitudinal study (Structural and Functional Progression of Glaucomatous Damage to the Macula study) with a diagnosis of glaucoma were analyzed. Patients were tested with 10-2 and 24-2 VF and spectral-domain OCT obtained at 4 to 6 month intervals. IOP from each visit was collected. Self-reported diagnoses of HTN were reported in 72 eyes (37%) in the patients included. Linear mixed effects regression was used to test the relationship between summary statistics from VF and OCT and HTN diagnosis. The goodness-of-fit of relationships was assessed with Bayesian information criterion.
Results
Mean follow-up IOP was most associated with the following OCT parameters: global macula ganglion cell layer (GCL), inferior macula GCL, mean macular vulnerability zone GCL, and mean less vulnerable zone macula GCL, and with the following VF parameters: 10-2 PSD and 10-2 MD. There was no significant difference in rates of progression between HTN and non-HTN patients for any OCT or VF parameter. Models with the best goodness-of-fit for the relationship between HTN and progression were the same as those observed for IOP.
Conclusion
Macular structural and functional parameters are more sensitive to IOP in terms of glaucomatous progression when compared with more conventional parameters. While HTN was not significantly associated with progression using any parameter, macular structural and functional parameters had a better goodness-of-fit to model progression and may be useful as endpoints.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts5
Macular structural and functional parameters, including global macula ganglion cell layer (GCL), inferior macula GCL, mean macular vulnerability zone GCL, mean less vulnerable zone macula GCL, 10-2 PSD, and 10-2 MD, were better correlated with pressure-dependent glaucomatous damage than conventional parameters in a prospective, longitudinal study of 191 eyes of 119 patients with glaucoma.
Self-reported systemic hypertension (HTN) was not associated with structural or functional progression in a cohort of 191 eyes of 119 patients with glaucoma, with 72 eyes (37%) reporting HTN.
Mean follow-up intraocular pressure (IOP) was most associated with the following OCT parameters: global macula ganglion cell layer (GCL), inferior macula GCL, mean macular vulnerability zone GCL, and mean less vulnerable zone macula GCL, and with the following VF parameters: 10-2 PSD and 10-2 MD, in a prospective, longitudinal study of 191 eyes of 119 patients with glaucoma.
There was no significant difference in rates of progression between patients with self-reported systemic hypertension and non-hypertensive patients for any OCT or VF parameter in a prospective, longitudinal study of 191 eyes of 119 patients with glaucoma.
Macular structural and functional parameters had a better goodness-of-fit to model glaucoma progression and may be useful as endpoints, compared to more conventional parameters, in a prospective, longitudinal study of 191 eyes of 119 patients with glaucoma.
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