The Impact of Achieving Target Intraocular Pressure on Glaucomatous Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thinning in a Treated Clinical Population.
Alex T Pham, Chris Bradley, Kaihua Hou, Patrick Herbert, Michael V Boland, Pradeep Y Ramulu, Jithin Yohannan
Summary
Being above the clinician-set target pressure is associated with more rapid RNFL thinning in suspect, mild, and moderate glaucoma.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To estimate the effect of being below and above the clinician-set target intraocular pressure (IOP) on rates of glaucomatous retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thinning in a treated real-world clinical population.
DESIGN
Retrospective cohort study.
METHODS
A total of 3256 eyes (1923 patients) with ≥5 reliable optical coherence tomography scans and 1 baseline visual field test were included. Linear mixed-effects modeling estimated the effects of the primary independent variables (mean target difference [measured IOP - target IOP] and mean IOP, mm Hg) on the primary dependent variable (RNFL slope, µm/y) while accounting for additional confounding variables (age, biological sex, race, baseline RNFL, baseline pachymetry, and disease severity). A spline term accounted for differential effects when above (target difference >0 mm Hg) and below (target difference ≤0 mm Hg) target pressure.
RESULTS
Eyes below and above target had significantly different mean RNFL slopes (-0.44 vs -0.71 µm/y, P < .001). Each 1 mm Hg increase above target had a 0.143 µm/y faster rate of RNFL thinning (P < .001). Separating by disease severity, suspect, mild, moderate, and advanced glaucoma had 0.135 (P = .002), 0.116 (P = .009), 0.203 (P = .02), and 0.65 (P = .22) µm/y faster rates of RNFL thinning per 1 mm Hg increase, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
Being above the clinician-set target pressure is associated with more rapid RNFL thinning in suspect, mild, and moderate glaucoma. Faster rates of thinning were also present in advanced glaucoma, but statistical significance was limited by the lower sample size of eyes above target and the optical coherence tomography floor effect.
More by Alex T Pham
View full profile →The Effect of Transitioning from SITA Standard to SITA Faster on Visual Field Performance.
Detecting Visual Field Worsening From Optic Nerve Head and Macular Optical Coherence Tomography Thickness Measurements.
Comparing the Utility of Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer and Ganglion Cell Inner Plexiform Layer OCT Changes to Detect Glaucoma Progression.
Top Research in IOP & Medical Therapy
Browse all →The Complications of Myopia: A Review and Meta-Analysis.
Inflammation in Glaucoma: From the back to the front of the eye, and beyond.
Treatment Outcomes in the Primary Tube Versus Trabeculectomy Study after 1 Year of Follow-up.
In the Knowledge Library
Discussion
Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.