At ARVO this year, research gravitated toward some of the many gray areas of our understanding of glaucomanamely, testing and diagnosing, glaucoma progression, medication and management, and patient compliance.
Make a Positive Diagnosis
Researchers in
Massachusetts
Both new instruments in the aforementioned studies may allow us to accurately measure daily diurnal variation and circadian variation. And, the next two studies point out the usefulness of this information.
Researchers based in
Researchers in
Identifying risk factors and additional tests to help predict glaucoma is always helpful. The following three studies do just that.
A study led by researchers in Brazil and New York compared the water-drinking test with the 30 inverted body position test to determine their impact on patients IOP.1059/D1002 The 71 eyes examined in the study were categorized as normal, glaucoma suspect or diagnosed with early glaucoma.
Patients fasted before the water-drinking test, in which they drank one liter of water in five minutes. Measurements were taken at 15, 30 and 45 minutes. For the 30 inversion test, patients IOP was recorded after five minutes of lying in this position. Results showed that the 30 inversion test was as effective as the water drinking test for peak IOP detection, and researchers note that it is faster and more comfortable for practitioners and patients.
Philadelphia
Similarly, researchers in
Progression and Evaluation
Researchers in
In Israel, researchers found that optical coherence tomography (OCT) was able to better identify retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) loss than standard visual fields tests.733/D1071 After comparing RFNL thickness of unaffected quadrants of glaucomatous eyes to corresponding quadrants in healthy eyes, researchers found that glaucomatous RNFL was significantly thinner than that of the control RNFL. OCT detected 76% of these thin retinal nerve fiber layers.
One study examined the Glaucoma Progression Analysis (GPA) tool of the Humphrey Field Analyzer. Researchers in
Treatment
Making the best recommendation on secondary and tertiary treatment can be difficult. But, the following studies provide some guidance in this murky area.
Researchers in
Each treatment regimen resulted in a lower IOP than latanoprost monotherapy, but the DTFC-and-latanoprost regimen resulted in the lowest mean 24-hour IOP, as well as the lowest IOP at each measurement. But, this treatment also resulted in the most stinging upon instillation.
Researchers in New York examined the inflammatory response by surface epithelia upon exposure to prostaglandin analogs.3820/A187 In comparing the effects of travoprost Z 0.004%, travoprost 0.004% with BAK 0.015% and latanoprost 0.005% with BAK 0.02% on human conjunctival and corneal epithelial cell cultures, researchers found that travoprost Z incited the least inflammatory response and that latanoprost 0.005% with BAK 0.02% elicited the greatest. They note that the preservative appeared to induce nearly 70% of the response.
Two studies examined selective laser trabeculoplastys (SLTs) effects on IOP and primary open-angle glaucoma. New York researchers found that SLT resulted in significantly lower IOP one year after the procedure in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma who were already taking maximum medical therapy.1235/A109 In this retrospective study, the mean pre-treatment IOP was 18.97mm Hg, and at the one-year post-SLT follow-up, IOP was reduced by a mean of 2.48mm Hg.
But, another group of New York researchers assessed the efficacy of third and fourth repeat SLT procedures, and their ability to control IOP, and found that the efficacy of SLT declined with the amount of repeat procedures.1241/A115 The retrospective study found that 30% of third SLT procedures failed at three months and that nearly 50% did so by six months. And, researchers found that nearly 60% of fourth SLT procedures failed at one month and nearly 75% failed at five months.
Should we become more aggressive in our treatment? Can a single IOP measurement really indicate treatment failure? Yes, say New York researchers, if it is measured at a mean of 6mm Hg above target.3605/D888 Researchers posit, after examination, that an acceptable range of variability extends 1.05 standard deviations above the maximum target goal, and that, with a 95% confidence rate, a patient with a single IOP reading 6mm Hg above goal is 99.5% likely to fail therapy.
Compliance
Do you know how many of your patients adhere to their care regimens? Maybe not, according to researchers in
And, researchers in
Perhaps patients use too many drops per application because they require aid for instillation.
Dr. Cole is in private practice in
687/D960. Pitchon EM, Leonardi M, Renaud P, et al. First in vivo human measure of the intraocular pressure fluctuation and ocular pulsation by a wireless soft contact lens sensor.
686/D959. Dresher RP, Chow EY, Fogle BN, et al. Improving glaucoma treatment: an implantable IOP monitor providing uninterrupted measurements.
1059/D1002. Kanadani FN, Moreira TCA, Melo FH, et al. A new provocative test for glaucoma?
1054/D997. Orzalesi N, Fogagnolo P, Ferreras A, Rossetti L. Circadian intraocular pressure fluctuations: Can we really estimate them during office hours?
1051/D994. Cronemberger A, Silva ACL, Calixto S. The importance of intraocular pressure at 6:00am in bed and darkness in suspects and glaucomatous patients.
1064/D1007. Spaeth GL, Wang Y, Barros DSMd, et al. Asymmetric intraocular pressure in subjects with or without glaucoma.
1065/D1008. Hong S, Kang S, Kim EK, et al. Latent asymmetric intraocular pressure as a predictor of glaucomatous visual field deterioration.
3651/D1042. Ayala E, Anton A, Martin B, et al. Detection of progression with HRTs topographic change analysis.
733/D1071. Geyer O, Fishelson-Arev T, Mathalone N, et al. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) can identify retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) loss, beyond visual field defect in glaucoma.
1094/D1037. Bardavio J, Pazos M, Castany M, et al. Glaucoma progression detection: comparison of expert visual field evaluation and glaucoma progression analyzer.
1210/A52. Konstas AG, Mikropoulos D, Dimopoulos AT, et al. Second-line therapy with dorzolamide/timolol or latanoprost/timolol fixed combination versus added dorzolamide/timolol fixed combination to latanoprost monotherapy.
3820/A187. Epstein SP, Chen D, Asbell PA. Inflammatory response by ocular surface epithelia upon exposure to prostaglandin analogs.
1241/A115. Basile M, Ostrovsky A, Danias J, et al. Effect of third and fourth SLT on IOP.
1235/A109. Malen M, Lai P. Effects of SLT on IOP in POAG in maximum medical therapy.
3605/D888. Patel S, Young J, Nissan E. A single intraocular pressure measurement of 6mm Hg above goal indicates glaucoma treatment failure.
1579/A79. Vanderbroek S, Dobbels F, De Geest S, et al. Ophthalmologists poorly predict patient non-adherence.
1582/A82. Hermann MM, Bron AM, Creuzot-Garcher CP, Diestelhorst M. Electronic compliance monitoring in glaucoma patients used to topical therapy.
1581/A81. Papachristou GC, Radcliffe NM, Sbeity Z, et al. A new positioning aid for eye drop instillation.