Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
Invest Ophthalmol Vis SciJanuary 2025Randomized Controlled Trial

Relationship Between Intraocular Pressure and the True Rate of Functional and Structural Progression in the United Kingdom Glaucoma Treatment Study.

Visual FieldOptic Nerve & Disc

Summary

VF appeared to deteriorate at a faster rate than structural measurements. However, this could be explained by the floor-effect from nonfunctional tissue. IOP induced a similar acceleration in RoP per mm Hg increase.

Abstract

PURPOSE

To investigate the effect of average intraocular pressure (IOP) on the true rate of glaucoma progression (RoP) in the United Kingdom Glaucoma Treatment Study (UKGTS).

METHODS

UKGTS participants were randomized to placebo or Latanoprost drops and monitored for up to two years with visual field tests (VF, 24-2 SITA standard), IOP measurements, and optic nerve imaging. We included eyes with at least three structural or functional assessments (VF with <15% false-positive errors). Structural tests measured rim area (RA) with Heidelberg retina tomography (HRT) and average peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL) thickness with optical coherence tomography (OCT). One eye of 436 patients (222 on Latanoprost) was analyzed. A Bayesian hierarchical model estimated the true RoP of VF and structural metrics, and their correlations, using sign-reversed multivariable exponential distribution. RA and pRNFL measurements were converted to a dB scale, matching the VF metric (mean deviation [MD]). The effect of average IOP on the true RoPs was estimated.

RESULTS

True RoP at the mean average IOP (17 mm Hg) was faster (P < 0.001) for VF-MD (-0.59 [-0.73, -0.48] dB/year) than HRT-RA (-0.05 [-0.07, -0.03] dB/year) and OCT-pRNFL (-0.08 [-0.11, -0.06] dB/year). The proportional acceleration of RoP per mm Hg increase was, however, not significantly different (smallest P = 0.15). Accounting for the structural floor-effect largely eliminated the differences in RoPs (smallest P = 0.25).

CONCLUSIONS

VF appeared to deteriorate at a faster rate than structural measurements. However, this could be explained by the floor-effect from nonfunctional tissue. IOP induced a similar acceleration in RoP per mm Hg increase.

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Discussion

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