Abstract

To evaluate and correlate the structural changes between peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) and macular ganglion cell layer (GCL) + inner plexiform layer (IPL) in different stages of glaucoma using PanoMap ® optical coherence tomography (OCT). Retrospective observational study. Glaucoma diagnostic test data were collected from early to moderate open-angle glaucoma patients. The average and minimum GCL + IPL thickness, sectoral GCL + IPL thickness, and the average and sectoral RNFL thickness were correlated with the different glaucoma stages. This study included 157 eyes from 157 glaucoma patients. Patients were grouped into pre-perimetric, early, and moderate glaucoma. The mean average RNFL thickness, RNFL thickness per sector, average GCL + IPL thickness, and minimum GCL + IPL thickness were different between the three groups ( P < 0.001), except for the nasal sector ( P = 0.643). The mean GCL + IPL thickness in all six sectors showed differences between the groups ( P < 0.001), except the superonasal sector ( P < 0.002). The inferior GCL + IPL sector is the thinnest, followed by the inferotemporal sector. There was a strong correlation between the mean average RNFL and the average GCL + IPL thickness in the pre-perimetric group ( r = 0.4963, P < 0.001) and the moderate group ( r = 0.6534, P < 0.001). The early glaucoma group did not show significant correlation ( r = 0.2963, P = 0.0536). Peripapillary RNFL and macular GCL + IPL thinning was evident in different stages of glaucoma, with more thinning observed with increasing glaucoma severity. The peripapillary RNFL and macular GCL + IPL average thickness values were highly correlated in the pre-perimetric and moderate stages of glaucoma.

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