Abstract

BackgroundGlaucoma surgery have been developed to lower intraocular pressure in a less invasive manner than traditional glaucoma surgery. The purpose of this article is to determine the outcome of using combined phacoemulsification technique, ab-interno trabeculectomy dual blade and endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation (ECP) surgeries in patients with primary open angle glaucoma.MethodsA retrospective case series was performed on 27 consecutive eyes with both primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and cataract; each eye was treated with combined phacoemulsification, ab-interno trabeculectomy-Kahook Dual Blade and Endocyclophotocoagulation at Instituto de ojos Oftalmosalud, Lima, Peru, between April 2017 and May 2017. Inclusion criteria: 1) Patients with uncontrolled mild to advanced POAG (according to Glaucoma Grading Scale HODAPP) 2) cataract condition 3) treatment with two or more glaucoma medications due to rapid progression in the visual fields (at least two in a short period of time). Intraocular pressure (IOP), best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) logMAR and number of glaucoma medications were recorded prior to the study, at day 1, week 1, and 1,3,6 and 9 months after surgery. Primary outcome measure was surgical success defined in terms of IOP < 14 mmHg either with no medications (complete success) or with medications (qualified success).ResultsA total of 27 eyes from 27 patients were included. The mean basal IOP was 17.0 ± 3.7 mmHg and postoperatively was 11.6 ± 1.9 mmHg and 11.4 ± 1.8 mmHg (P < 0.001) at 6 and 9 months respectively. Glaucoma medications decreased from 1.9 ± 1.4 to 0.56 ± 1.05 at 9 month follow-ups (P < 0.001). Preoperative best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) showed and improvement from 0.4 ± 0.4 LogMAR to 0.2 ± 0.4 logMAR at 9 months. The main complication was blood reflux intra-operatively (66.7%), which resolved without re-operation. The mean IOP was reduced by 32.9% from baseline and the surgical success was 92,6%, (complete success 70,3% and qualified success 29,6%) at 9 months.ConclusionsIn patients with POAG, combined treatment with phacoemulsification, ab-interno trabeculectomy and endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation effectively reduced IOP and glaucoma medication dependence.

Highlights

  • Glaucoma surgery have been developed to lower intraocular pressure in a less invasive manner than traditional glaucoma surgery

  • Inclusion Criteria: Glaucoma patients with uncontrolled POAG from mild to advanced, according to Glaucoma Grading Scale (HODAPP), cataract condition, treatment with two or more glaucoma medications; uncontrolled was defined as progression in at least 2 visual fields and/ or retinal nerve fibre layer thinning in spfectral domain optical coherence tomography, Exclusion Criteria: history of glaucoma surgery, any subsequent glaucoma surgery in the follow-up period, narrow angles or closed angle glaucoma, neovascular, uveitic or other secondary glaucoma, retinal or neurophthalmic diseases

  • All eyes with POAG were classified into 3 groups according to Glaucoma Grading Scale (HODAPP): 10 (37%) eyes were mild, 10 (37%) eyes moderate, and 7 (25.9%) eyes advanced

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Summary

Introduction

Glaucoma surgery have been developed to lower intraocular pressure in a less invasive manner than traditional glaucoma surgery. Endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation is one of the safest armamentarium therapies for glaucoma; the ciliary processes are visualized directly using diode laser energy treated precisely until shrinkage and whitening occur. This therapy causes a reduction of aqueous humour production which decreases IOP effectively without the complications described for cycloablative procedures such as persistent hypotony, phthisis, inflammation or visual loss [6, 7]. Gold standard filtering surgery is associated with high rate of immediate and late complications as reported in the TVT study For this reason, there is a trend to treat glaucoma patients with minimally-invasive procedures when maximal tolerated medical therapy fails to control visual field loss in initial or moderate glaucoma

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