Five-Year, Prospective, Randomized, Multi-Surgeon Trial of Two Trabecular Bypass Stents versus Prostaglandin for Newly Diagnosed Open-Angle Glaucoma.
Robert D Fechtner, Lilit Voskanyan, Steven D Vold, Manfred Tetz, Gerd Auffarth, Imran Masood, Leon Au, Albert S Khouri, Iqbal Ike K Ahmed, Hady Saheb
Summary
This prospective randomized trial demonstrates 5-year effectiveness and safety of 2 trabecular bypass stents in patients with newly diagnosed, treatment-naive POAG, with comparably favorable outcomes as topical prostaglandin.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To evaluate 5-year safety and efficacy of 2 trabecular micro-bypass stents versus prostaglandin as initial stand-alone treatment for newly diagnosed, treatment-naive primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG).
DESIGN
Prospective, randomized, controlled, multi-surgeon clinical trial.
PARTICIPANTS
Enrolled eyes (n = 101) were phakic and had a confirmed POAG diagnosis, normal angle anatomy, mean diurnal intraocular pressure (IOP) 21 to 40 mmHg, and vertical cup-to-disc (C:D) ratio ≤0.9.
METHODS
Eyes were randomized (1:1) to receive either 2 stents (iStent trabecular micro-bypass; Glaukos Corporation, San Clemente, CA) or once-daily topical travoprost.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
The primary and secondary efficacy end points were the change from screening in mean diurnal IOP at months 12 and 24, respectively, without glaucoma surgery or add-on medication (any medication in stent eyes or a second medication in travoprost eyes). Two additional secondary end points were the proportion of eyes achieving treatment success at months 12 and 24, defined as IOP 6 to 18 mmHg without additional medication or glaucoma surgery. This report shows these efficacy measures through 60 months. Safety measures included best-corrected visual acuity, C:D ratio, visual field, pachymetry, complications, and adverse events.
RESULTS
Of 101 enrolled eyes (54 stent eyes, 47 travoprost eyes), 90 eyes (49 stent eyes, 41 travoprost eyes) completed 5-year follow-up. Five-year mean diurnal IOP was 16.5±1.2 mmHg in stent eyes (35.3% reduced vs. 25.5±2.5 mmHg preoperatively; P < 0.0001) and 16.3±1.9 mmHg in travoprost eyes (35.1% reduced vs. 25.1±4.6 mmHg preoperatively; P < 0.0001). During follow-up, add-on medication was initiated in 12 stent eyes (22.2% of the initial 54-eyes) and 18 travoprost eyes (38.3% of the initial 47-eyes). By 5 years, 17% (6/35) of stent eyes and 44% (14/32) of travoprost eyes needed add-on medication to control IOP (P = 0.017). Treatment success was achieved in 77% (27/35) of stent eyes and 53% (17/32) of travoprost eyes (P = 0.04). Both groups exhibited excellent safety.
CONCLUSIONS
This prospective randomized trial demonstrates 5-year effectiveness and safety of 2 trabecular bypass stents in patients with newly diagnosed, treatment-naive POAG, with comparably favorable outcomes as topical prostaglandin.
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