An evidence-based review of prognostic factors for glaucomatous visual field progression.
Ernest Paul J, Schouten Jan S, Beckers Henny J, Hendrikse Fred, Prins Martin H, Webers Carroll A
AI Summary
This review identified age, disc hemorrhages, baseline visual field loss, IOP, and exfoliation as key prognostic factors for glaucoma progression, helping clinicians identify high-risk patients.
Abstract
Purpose
To examine which prognostic factors are associated with glaucomatous visual field progression.
Design
Knowledge of prognostic factors helps clinicians to select patients at risk of glaucomatous visual field progression and intensify their treatment.
Methods
By consulting relevant databases, we identified 2733 articles published up to September 2010, of which 85 articles investigating prognostic factors for visual field progression in patients with open-angle glaucoma (OAG) were eligible. We summarized results for each factor in tables, noting the direction of the association between the prognostic factor and progression, and the accompanying P value. Four authors, working blind to the factors, independently judged the extent to which a prognostic factor was associated with glaucomatous visual field progression. If there were different associations for normal-tension glaucoma (NTG) studies, they were judged separately. Consensus was reached during group meetings.
Main outcome measures
A ranking of all studied prognostic factors for glaucomatous visual field progression according to their likelihood of being prognostic.
Results
A total of 103 different prognostic factors were investigated in 85 articles. The following factors were clearly associated with glaucomatous visual field progression: age, disc hemorrhages (for NTG), baseline visual field loss, baseline intraocular pressure (IOP), and exfoliation syndrome. An association was unlikely for family history of glaucoma, atherosclerosis, systemic hypertension, visual acuity, sex (for NTG), systolic blood pressure, myopic refractive error (for NTG), and Raynaud's phenomenon.
Conclusions
The factors we found clearly associated with progression could be used in clinical practice and for developing clinical prediction models. For many other factors, further research is necessary.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
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