Am J Ophthalmol
Am J OphthalmolFebruary 2026Journal Article

Topical Brimonidine Is Associated with Trabeculectomy Failure in Glaucoma Patients.

IOP & Medical TherapyGlaucoma Surgery

Summary

Brimonidine is associated with a near threefold increase in trabeculectomy failure from high IOP. Further study is needed to understand the underlying mechanisms and to optimize preoperative medication.

Abstract

PURPOSE

To evaluate the role of preoperative glaucoma medication in the surgical outcomes of trabeculectomy.

DESIGN

Retrospective observational cohort study.

PARTICIPANTS

A total of 501 eyes of adult glaucoma patients who underwent primary trabeculectomy.

METHODS

Using data from a single academic center, we identified adult trabeculectomy patients by procedure codes between January 1, 2015, and March 21, 2022. Preoperative and postoperative electronic medical records, up to 3 years, were extracted and included demographics, diagnoses, intraocular pressure (IOP), and medications. Preoperative medications were matched to 43 unique formulations, incorporating all concentration variants, brand names, and generic equivalents. Data accuracy was validated with a manual chart review.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Surgical success was defined by IOP between 6 and 15 mmHg or greater than 20% reduction from baseline without reoperation. Surgical failure from high IOP was determined by IOP >15 mmHg or <20% reduction from baseline on two consecutive visits, or reoperation due to high IOP.

RESULTS

Preoperative brimonidine was associated with an increased risk of high IOP trabeculectomy failure (hazard ratio [HR] 2.87; p = 0.002), as was higher baseline IOP (HR 1.33; p = 0.014). Other topical agents, such as beta blocker, prostaglandin, or carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, age, gender, race, or glaucoma severity, did not show an increased or decreased hazard of high IOP surgical failure. At 3 years, survival analysis showed the probability of success from high-IOP failure was 81.9% in the brimonidine group versus 93.36% in the non-brimonidine group (p < 0.00, log-rank test).

CONCLUSIONS

Brimonidine is associated with a near threefold increase in trabeculectomy failure from high IOP. Further study is needed to understand the underlying mechanisms and to optimize preoperative medication.

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Discussion

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