Literature DB >> 26315699

Prior rates of visual field loss and lifetime risk of blindness in glaucomatous patients undergoing trabeculectomy.

W S Foulsham1,2, L Fu1, A J Tatham1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Trend-based analyses examining rates of visual field (VF) loss in glaucoma are useful for predicting risk of vision-related morbidity. Although patients with faster losses are likely to require treatment escalation, little is known about rates that might trigger a decision to intervene surgically. The aims of this study were to investigate prior rates of VF loss in patients attending for trabeculectomy and to estimate, in the absence of surgical intervention, lifetime risk of visual impairment, and blindness. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective analysis of 117 eyes of 86 consecutive patients with glaucoma attending for trabeculectomy, including 53 patients referred from general ophthalmology clinics and 33 patients from specialist glaucoma clinics. Rates of change in standard automated perimetry mean deviation were examined using linear regression and random coefficient models. Risk of lifetime visual impairment and blindness was calculated using life expectancy data.
RESULTS: Mean age at surgery was 71.0±9.7 years. Patients were followed for 10.7±7.5 years prior to surgery with an average of seven useable fields per eye. On average patients referred from general clinics lost 1.04 dB/year compared with 0.77 dB/year in those referred from glaucoma clinics (P=0.070). Patients referred from general clinics had more medication changes prior to surgery (3.4 and 2.6 changes, respectively; P=0.004). Given Scottish life expectancy data, untreated, 61 eyes (52%) would have passed the threshold for visual impairment, whereas 40 (34%) would have passed the threshold demarcating blindness.
CONCLUSION: Patients attending for trabeculectomy had faster average rates of field loss prior to surgery than published values for the general glaucoma population with over one-third of eyes studied predicted to have become blind without intervention. Those managed by glaucoma specialists had fewer changes in medication and tended to slower rates of VF loss, although the latter did not reach statistical significance.

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Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26315699      PMCID: PMC4815691          DOI: 10.1038/eye.2015.156

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eye (Lond)        ISSN: 0950-222X            Impact factor:   3.775


  19 in total

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2.  Relative risk of progressive glaucomatous visual field loss in patients enrolled and not enrolled in a prospective longitudinal study.

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4.  Canadian Glaucoma Study: 3. Impact of risk factors and intraocular pressure reduction on the rates of visual field change.

Authors:  Balwantray C Chauhan; Frederick S Mikelberg; Paul H Artes; A Gordon Balazsi; Raymond P LeBlanc; Mark R Lesk; Marcelo T Nicolela; Graham E Trope
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5.  Beta-Zone parapapillary atrophy and the velocity of glaucoma progression.

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6.  Prediction of glaucomatous visual field loss by extrapolation of linear trends.

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7.  Glaucoma with early visual field loss affecting both hemifields and the risk of disease progression.

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8.  Factors affecting rates of visual field progression in glaucoma patients with optic disc hemorrhage.

Authors:  Tiago S Prata; Carlos Gustavo V De Moraes; Christopher C Teng; Celso Tello; Robert Ritch; Jeffrey M Liebmann
Journal:  Ophthalmology       Date:  2009-11-06       Impact factor: 12.079

9.  Natural history of open-angle glaucoma.

Authors:  Anders Heijl; Boel Bengtsson; Leslie Hyman; M Cristina Leske
Journal:  Ophthalmology       Date:  2009-10-24       Impact factor: 12.079

10.  The probability of blindness from open-angle glaucoma.

Authors:  M G Hattenhauer; D H Johnson; H H Ing; D C Herman; D O Hodge; B P Yawn; L C Butterfield; D T Gray
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1.  Characterization of Central Visual Field Loss in End-stage Glaucoma by Unsupervised Artificial Intelligence.

Authors:  Mengyu Wang; Jorryt Tichelaar; Louis R Pasquale; Lucy Q Shen; Michael V Boland; Sarah R Wellik; Carlos Gustavo De Moraes; Jonathan S Myers; Pradeep Ramulu; MiYoung Kwon; Osamah J Saeedi; Hui Wang; Neda Baniasadi; Dian Li; Peter J Bex; Tobias Elze
Journal:  JAMA Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-02-01       Impact factor: 7.389

  1 in total

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