Abstract
To evaluate the claims-based 5-year economic and reintervention burden for patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) after incisional glaucoma surgery in the United States. Retrospective Medicare claims analysis. One thousand nine hundred forty-five Medicare fee-for-service patients with POAG treated with trabeculectomy, tube shunt, or EX-PRESS shunt procedures from 2010 through2011. Patients with POAG treated with incisional glaucoma surgery (trabeculectomy, tube shunt, or EX-PRESS shunt) from 2010 through 2011 were identified in the Medicare 5% Standard Analytical Files. Ten years of claims data for each patient (2005-2016) were evaluated for prior incisional surgeries and downstream procedures in the treated eye within 5 years of index. Patients' characteristics, downstream procedures, and POAG-related costs were evaluated. Proportions of patients with downstream procedures in the index eye indicating failure of the index surgery, glaucoma reoperations, nonfailure complications, interventions, or cataract surgery were assessed over 5 years of follow-up. Cumulative rates of index surgery failure and glaucoma reoperations over 5 years after incisional glaucoma surgery. Of 1945 patients, 223 underwent EX-PRESS shunt, 551 underwent tube shunt, and 1171 underwent trabeculectomy at index. Rates of failure, glaucoma reoperations, or nonfailure complications rose over 5 years after index for all patient subgroups. At 1 year, 15.1% of EX-PRESS shunt patients, 11.6% of tube shunt patients, and 8.8% of trabeculectomy patients had experienced failure based on postindex procedures. By 5 years follow-up, these rates were 31.5% of EX-PRESS shunt patients, 27.1% of tube shunt patients, and 23.5% of trabeculectomy patients. Five-year rates of glaucoma reoperations were 18.3%, 14.0%, and 15.1%, respectively. Among tube shunt and trabeculectomy patients with prior incisional surgery, the 5-year failure rates were 32.5% and 32.6%, and reoperations rates were 12.0% and 26.1%, respectively. More than one-fourth of patients with POAG treated with incisional surgery underwent additional procedures to address index surgery failure within 5 years. Of these, more than half underwent additional incisional glaucoma surgery. These outcomes from clinical practice settings demonstrate that patients with POAG who require incisional surgery continue to need additional safe and effective surgical treatment options to manage their glaucoma.
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