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Br J OphthalmolJanuary 200827 citations

The efficacy and harm of prostaglandin analogues for IOP reduction in glaucoma patients compared to dorzolamide and brimonidine: a systematic review.

Hodge W G, Lachaine J, Steffensen I, Murray C, Barnes D, Foerster V, Ducruet T, Morrison A


AI Summary

This review found latanoprost lowers IOP more than dorzolamide, but similarly to brimonidine, which caused more ocular side effects. This guides glaucoma treatment choices.

Abstract

Aim

To systematically review the literature on the efficacy and harm of prostaglandin analogues (PGAs) compared to brimonidine and dorzolamide in treating elevated intraocular pressure (IOP).

Methods

Keywords were searched in major literature databases to identify relevant randomised clinical trials (RCTs) of PGAs for ophthalmic use. The study quality of RCTs was assessed using the Jadad scale. Outcomes assessed included reduction in IOP in individual patients, adverse events (AEs) and withdrawals due to AEs.

Results

Eight unique RCTs evaluating a total of 1,722 individuals were included in this systematic review. Analysis did not show a significant reduction in the mean IOP from patients receiving latanoprost compared with those receiving brimonidine (WMD = -1.04; p = 0.30). On the other hand, the latanoprost group showed a significant reduction in mean IOP compared to the dorzolamide group (WMD = -2.64; p<0.00001). The number of ocular AEs (excluding hyperaemia) was significantly higher in the brimonidine group compared with the latanoprost group (RR = 0.66; p = 0.0005).

Conclusion

Latanoprost was found to be significantly superior to dorzolamide but not brimonidine. However, ocular adverse events were significantly fewer in latanoprost users than in brimonide users. Neither travoprost nor bimatoprost was compared to dorzolamide or brimonidine in the present literature.


MeSH Terms

AdultAgedAntihypertensive AgentsBrimonidine TartrateFemaleGlaucomaHumansLatanoprostMaleMiddle AgedProstaglandins F, SyntheticProstaglandins, SyntheticQuinoxalinesRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicSulfonamidesThiophenesTreatment Outcome

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