Clin Exp Ophthalmol
Clin Exp OphthalmolMarch 2025Journal Article

Drug-associated glaucoma: A real-world study based on the Food and Drug Administration adverse event reporting system database.

Artificial Intelligence

Summary

Preventing drug-associated glaucoma is more effective than treatment. Identifying the risk and drug-induced times of systemic and ophthalmic drugs can reduce occurrence risk. Clinical practitioners should be vigilant and inform patients of these risks.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

This study aims to assess the risk of drug-associated glaucoma and track its epidemiological characteristics using real-world data.

METHODS

Adverse event reports from the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) from January 2004 to December 2023 were analysed. Disproportionality analysis and the Bayesian Confidence Propagation Neural Network algorithm were used. The study classified drugs associated with glaucoma, assessed risk levels, and compared drug-induced times across different categories.

RESULTS

Eight hundred and five drugs were linked to glaucoma in the FAERS database. Disproportionality analysis identified 46 drugs with significant risk, mainly adrenergic medications (clobetasol propionate, fluocinolone acetonide), antihypertensives (hydrochlorothiazide), insulin (insulin human), anticholinergics (umeclidinium, darifenacin), VEGF inhibitors (brolucizumab, faricimab), and psychotropics (topiramate, ziprasidone). The top three high-risk drugs were clobetasol propionate, umeclidinium, and fluocinolone acetonide. The shortest drug-induced times were observed with indacaterol, salmeterol, and umeclidinium. Anticholinergic medications had the shortest drug-induced time among all categories. Females (62.5%) and the elderly (average age 63.5 ± 16.8 years) were predominantly affected. Reports of drug-associated glaucoma increased over the years.

CONCLUSION

Preventing drug-associated glaucoma is more effective than treatment. Identifying the risk and drug-induced times of systemic and ophthalmic drugs can reduce occurrence risk. Clinical practitioners should be vigilant and inform patients of these risks.

Keywords

FAERSdisproportionality analysesdrug induction timedrug‐induced riskglaucoma

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Discussion

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