Ophthalmol Glaucoma
Ophthalmol Glaucoma2020Journal Article

Prostaglandin-Associated Periorbitopathy in Children and Young Adults with Glaucoma.

Pediatric GlaucomaIOP & Medical Therapy

Summary

Mild-to-moderate changes in the ocular adnexa can develop in children and young adults with long-term PGA exposure. Patients and their families should be educated on the possibility of PAP, especially when initiating monocular PGA therapy.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate for relative palpebral and orbital changes after long-term unilateral exposure to prostaglandin analogues (PGAs) in patients with childhood glaucoma.

DESIGN

Prospective cross-sectional cohort study.

PARTICIPANTS

A total of 29 patients with history of childhood glaucoma, who were treated unilaterally with PGAs for at least 12 months.

METHODS

Based on 4 standardized clinical photographs (en face with eyes open, right and left side views with eyes open, and en face with eyes closed), 3 masked expert graders each independently selected the eye they perceived to have received unilateral PGA treatment by physical appearance alone and graded the following features relative to the other eye: (1) ocular (e.g., conjunctival hyperemia, iris heterochromia, and buphthalmos), (2) palpebral (e.g., eyelash trichomegaly, eyelash hypertrichosis, eyelid erythema, eyelid edema, eyelid hyperpigmentation, high upper eyelid crease, upper eyelid ptosis, upper and/or lower eyelid retraction, and eyelid skin atrophy with presence of telangiectasias), and (3) periorbital (e.g., superior sulcus hollowing, proptosis, enophthalmos, hypoglobus, and hyperglobus). An interrater reliability analysis was performed using the Fleiss kappa (κ) statistic to determine consistency among raters.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Frequencies of each feature of prostaglandin-associated periorbitopathy (PAP); group consensus; interrater reliability of selected PGA-treatment laterality.

RESULTS

Median unilateral PGA exposure time was 31.7 months (interquartile range: 18.8-44.3 months). Eyelash trichomegaly and hypertrichosis (n = 22, 76%), high upper eyelid crease (n = 20, 69%), upper eyelid ptosis (n = 14, 52%), and superior sulcus hollowing (n = 15, 52%) were the most frequently observed features of PAP in PGA-treated eyes compared with untreated fellow eyes. Most of these changes were mild, but 20% to 30% of patients exhibited moderate eyelash and/or eyelid changes. One patient had severe PAP after long-term unilateral PGA exposure. Group consensus with correctly selected laterality was achieved in all patients. The inter-rater reliability was excellent (κ = 0.815, P < 0.001, 95% confidence interval [0.605, 1.000]).

CONCLUSIONS

Mild-to-moderate changes in the ocular adnexa can develop in children and young adults with long-term PGA exposure. Patients and their families should be educated on the possibility of PAP, especially when initiating monocular PGA therapy.

Discussion

Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.