| Literature DB >> 32158182 |
Jullia A Rosdahl1, Divakar Gupta1.
Abstract
Glaucoma is a common blinding disease; while there is no cure, effective treatments include medications, laser, and incisional surgery. There is significant interest from patients and doctors to develop safer surgical options throughout the spectrum of disease, to minimize treatment burden in mild glaucoma patients and to minimize risk of complications in patients needing more aggressive treatment. Surgical procedures called Minimally or Micro-Invasive Glaucoma Surgery (MIGS) are growing in popularity. Eighty-seven prospective studies on MIGS were identified and assessed for quality. Most (74%) did not have a control group. Twelve of the highest quality were reviewed. MIGS procedures appeared to have fewer complications, and lowered intraocular pressure, and reduced medication use. Studies were limited by small sample size, narrow spectrum of glaucomatous disease, and/or conflicts of interest. There is a need for high quality, independently funded and performed, comparative studies on the MIGS to help make treatment decisions.Entities:
Keywords: MIGS; ab interno; angle surgery; glaucoma treatment; microinvasive
Year: 2020 PMID: 32158182 PMCID: PMC6986542 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S239772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Quality Assessment Criteria
| Quality Metric | Point Value |
|---|---|
| Evidence of Transparent Study Design | |
| Registered in clinicaltrials.gov | +1 |
| Use of Control Group | |
| Control treatment arm (e.g. placebo, sham surgery, etc) | +1 |
| Any control group included | 0 |
| No control group (for example, baseline metrics of treatment group used) | −1 |
| Masking | |
| Masking of study participants to treatment group | +1 |
| Masking of study doctors to treatment group | +1 |
| No masking | 0 |
| Duration of Study Follow-Up | |
| Follow-up greater than 2 years | +1 |
| Follow-up 1–2 years | +1 |
| Follow-up 6 months to 1 year | 0 |
| Follow-up less than 6 months | −1 |
| Independence of Funding | |
| Government or independent foundational funding | +1 |
| Funded by the manufacturer or inventor | 0 |
| Conflicts of Interest | |
| Authors without conflicts of interest | +1 |
| Authors with conflicts | 0 |
Frequency of Quality Characteristics
| Quality Characteristic | Frequency (Percentage) |
|---|---|
| Registration with clinicaltrials.gov | 20 (24%) |
| Control Group | |
| No control group (comparison with baseline) | 64 (74%) |
| No control group (comparison with historical group) | 5 (5.7%) |
| Non-matched control group | 2 (2.3%) |
| Randomized control | 16 (18%) |
| Masking of participants or doctors | 6 (6.9%) |
| Follow-Up Period | |
| 2 years or greater | 26 (30%) |
| 1 to 2 years | 46 (53%) |
| 6 months to 1 year | 12 (14%) |
| Less than 6 months | 3 (3.4%) |
| Funding | |
| Industry-funded | 46 (53%) |
| No outside funding | 22 (25%) |
| Government or foundation grant support | 6 (6.9%) |
| Unknown | 13 (15%) |
| Conflicts of Interest (COI) | |
| At least 1 author with COI | 48 (55%) |
| No authors with COI | 34 (39%) |
| Unknown | 5 (5.7%) |
Figure 1Quality Scores by Technology. This scattered column graph displays the quality scores of individual studies of the technologies and surgical techniques. Each manuscript was assessed using the quality scale shown in Table 1. The total score for each manuscript was plotted for each type of MIGS. The line indicates the median, where appropriate. Similar techniques were grouped together (*) for single and few manuscripts. Ultrasound-based procedures included high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU)15 and ultrasonic circular cyclocoagulation (UC3).14 YAG gonio procedures included Er:YAG gonio puncture16,17 and Er:YAG goniotomy.18 Trabecular-based procedures included ab-interno gonio trabeculotomy,19 ab interno trabeculectomy (with vitrectomy forceps),20 endoscopic trabecular surgery,21 irrigation/aspiration of the trabecular meshwork,22 suture trab 360.23 Diathermy-based procedures were intrastromal diathermal keratostomy (IDK).24,25
Studies Selected for Review
| First Author, Year Type of MIGS | With Cataract Surgery? | Key Findings | Quality Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lima 2004 | Stand-alone | ECP vs Ahmed (in refractory glaucoma) | 4 |
| Gayton 1999 | With cataract surgery | Phaco/ECP vs phaco/trab | 5 |
| Aquino 2015 | Stand-alone | Micropulse vs continuous wave transscleral diode cyclophotocoagulation (in refractory glaucoma) | 6 |
| Quaranta 1999 | Stand-alone | Ab-interno gonio trabeculotomy vs trabeculectomy | 5 |
| Vold 2016 | Stand-alone | 2 iStents vs Travatan (in treatment-naïve POAG) | 4 |
| Fernandez-Barrientos 2010 | With cataract surgery | Phaco/iStent vs phaco alone (POAG or ocular hypertension) | 4 |
| Fea 2010 | With cataract surgery | Phaco/iStent vs phaco alone | 5 |
| Fea 2015 | With cataract surgery | Follow-up findings from above, at 4 years | 5 |
| Fea 2017 | Stand-alone | Hydrus vs SLT (in uncontrolled POAG) | 4 |
| Pfeiffer 2015 | With cataract surgery | Phaco/Hydrus vs phaco alone (in POAG) | 5 |
| Samuelson 2019 | With cataract surgery | Phaco/Hydrus vs phaco alone (in mild-moderate glaucoma) | 6 |
| Vold 2016 | With cataract surgery | CyPass/phaco vs phaco alone | 5 |