| Literature DB >> 33603325 |
Mark J Gallardo1, Steven R Sarkisian2, Steven D Vold3, Inder Paul Singh4, Brian E Flowers5, Anita Campbell6, Kavita Dhamdhere7, Thomas W Samuelson8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To report interim 6-month safety and efficacy outcomes of 360° canaloplasty and 180° trabeculotomy using the OMNI® Surgical System concomitantly with phacoemulsification in patients with open-angle glaucoma (OAG).Entities:
Keywords: MIGS; OMNI; canaloplasty; glaucoma surgery; open-angle glaucoma; trabeculotomy; viscodilation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33603325 PMCID: PMC7882439 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S296740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Demographic Data (n=137)
| Full Cohort, N=137 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Age (yr), mean (SD) | 68.5 (8.2) | |
| Gender, n (%) | ||
| Female | 84 (61) | |
| Male | 53 (39) | |
| Race/Ethnicity, n (%) | ||
| White | 112 (82) | |
| Other | 25 (18) | |
| Study eye, n (%) | ||
| Right | 68 (50) | |
| Left | 69 (50) | |
| Diagnosis n, (%) | ||
| POAG | 128 (93.4) | |
| PXF | 8 (5.8) | |
| PG | 1 (0.7) | |
| Visual field MD (dB), mean (SD) | −3.7 (3.6) | |
| Visual field PSD (dB), mean (SD) | 3.7 (2.6) | |
Abbreviation: SD, standard deviation.
Intraocular Pressure Outcomes
| Screening Medicated, N=137 | Baseline Unmedicated, N=137 | Month 1, N=136 | Month 3, N=132 | Month 6, N=134 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) IOP, mmHg | 17.3 (3.1) | 23.8 (3.1) | 16.7 (6.6) | 15.2 (3.6) | 15.1 (3.9) |
| No. of eyes on 0 medications | 90 (66%) | 98 (74%) | 104 (78%) | ||
| Mean (SD) IOP, mmHga | 15.6 (5.2) | 14.5 (2.9) | 14.2 (3.1) | ||
| Mean (SD) IOP reduction from unmedicated baselinea | 7.6 (4.6) | 8.7 (3.3) | 9.0 (3.3) | ||
| Mean (SD) percent IOP reduction from unmedicated baseline | 33 (19) | 37 (13) | 38 (13) | ||
| No. of eyes with IOP reduction ≥20%a | 74 (82%) | 97 (99%) | 104 (100%) | ||
| No. of eyes (%) with IOP reduction ≥20% and IOP >6 mmHg and ≤ 18 mmHga | 65 (72%) | 90 (92%) | 89 (86%) |
Note: aAmong eyes on no medications at each time point.
Abbreviations: IOP, intraocular pressure; SD, standard deviation.
Figure 1Mean IOP at each time point for the full cohort (n=137). Error bars represent standard deviation. *Indicates P<0.0001.
Figure 2Mean IOP at each time point among patients on no medications at each time point. Error bars represent standard deviation. *Indicates P<0.0001.
Medication Use Outcomes
| Screening Medicated, N=137 | Month 1, N=136 | Month 3, N=132 | Month 6, N=134 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) no. of anti-glaucoma medications | 1.8 (0.9) | 0.6 (0.9) | 0.4 (0.8) | 0.6 (1.0) |
| Mean (SD) [%] reduction from Screening | 1.2 (1.2) [69%] | 1.4 (1.1) [79%] | 1.5 (1.1) [81%] | |
| No. of eyes (%) on 0 medications and no increase in IOP | 87 (64%) | 97 (73%) | 104 (78%) | |
| No. of eyes (%) with no increase in medications | 109 (80%) | 117 (89%) | 119 (89%) |
Abbreviations: IOP, intraocular pressure; SD, standard deviation.
Figure 3Ocular hypotensive medication use. Error bars represent standard deviation. *Indicates P<0.0001.
The Nature and Incidence of Adverse Events
| N (%) | Seriousa | Device Related | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Layered hyphema ≥1mm | 7 (4.6%) | No | Yes | Recovered spontaneously without sequel |
| IOP increase ≥10 mmHg above baseline at ≥1 month | 3 (2.0%) | No | Yes | Recovered without sequel with hypotensive medication added |
| Blepharitis | 2 (1.3%) | No | No | Recovered spontaneously without sequel |
| Clinically significant cystoid macular edema | 1 (0.7%) | No | No | Ongoing, on topical steroid |
| Internal hordeolum | 1 (0.7%) | No | No | Ongoing with treatment |
| Keratoconjunctivitis sicca | 1 (0.7%) | No | No | Ongoing with treatment |
| Vitreous hemorrhage | 1 (0.7%) | No | No | Recovered spontaneously without sequel |
Notes: aAn adverse event that results in death, is life-threatening, requires in-patient hospitalization or prolongs existing hospitalization, necessitates medical or surgical intervention to preclude permanent impairment of a body function or permanent damage to a body structure, or is sight threatening.
Abbreviation: IOP, intraocular pressure.