TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparison of glaucomatous progression between untreated patients with normal-tension glaucoma and patients with therapeutically reduced intraocular pressures
AU - COLLABORATIVE NORMAL-TENSION GLAUCOMA STUDY GROUP
AU - Schulzer, Michael
AU - Alward, W. Lee
AU - Feldman, Frederick
AU - Cashwell, L. Frank
AU - Wilensky, Jacob
AU - Geijssen, H. Caroline
AU - Greeve, Erik
AU - Quigley, Harry
AU - Skuta, Greg
AU - Lichter, Paul R.
AU - Blondeau, Pierre
AU - Anderson, Douglas R.
AU - Grajewski, Alana
AU - Hodapp, Elizabeth
AU - Balazsi, Gordon
AU - Amyot, Marcel
AU - Levene, Ralph Z.
AU - Minckler, Don
AU - Heuer, Dale
AU - Drance, Stephen M.
AU - Mikelberg, Fred
AU - Douglas, Gordon
AU - Johnstone, Murray
AU - Trope, Graham
AU - Hoskins, H. Dunbar
AU - Pollack, Irvin P.
AU - Mills, Richard
AU - Kasner, Oscar P.
AU - Schwartz, Arthur
AU - Liebmann, Jeffrey
AU - Ritch, Robert
AU - Cohen, John
AU - Tuulonen, Anja
AU - Airaksinen, P. Juhani
AU - Clarkson, John
AU - Litinsky, Steven
AU - Hardy, Robert
AU - Schiffman, Joyce
AU - Rose, Alvin
AU - Neaton, James
AU - Anderson, D. R.
AU - Steele, Tara
AU - Anderson, Douglar R.
N1 - Funding Information:
The study was generously funded by the Glaucoma Research Foundation, with special grants from the Oxnard Foundation and the Edward J. Daly Foundation, San Francisco, California.
PY - 1998/10
Y1 - 1998/10
N2 - PURPOSE: To determine if intraocular pressure plays a part in the pathogenic process of normal-tension glaucoma. METHODS: One eye of each eligible subject was randomized either to be untreated as a control or to have intraocular pressure lowered by 30% from baseline. Eyes were randomized if they met criteria for diagnosis of normal-tension glaucoma and showed documented progression or high-risk field defects that threatened fixation or the appearance of a new disk hemorrhage. The clinical course (visual field and optic disk) of the group with lowered intraocular pressure was compared with the clinical course when intraocular pressure remained at its spontaneous untreated level. RESULTS: One hundred-forty eyes of 140 patients were used in this study. Sixty-one were in the treatment group, and 79 were untreated controls. Twenty-eight (35%) of the control eyes and 7 (12%) of the treated eyes reached end points (specifically defined criteria of glaucomatous optic disk progression or visual field loss). An overall survival analysis showed a statistically significant difference between the two groups (P < .0001). The mean survival time ± SD of the treated group was 2,688 ± 123 days and for the control group, 1,695 ± 143 days. Of 34 cataracts developed during the study, 11 (14%) occurred in the control group and 23 (38%) in the treated group (P = .0075), with the highest incidence in those whose treatment included filtration surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Intraocular pressure is part of the pathogenic process in normal-tension glaucoma. Therapy that is effective in lowering intraocular pressure and free of adverse effects would be expected to be beneficial in patients who are at risk of disease progression.
AB - PURPOSE: To determine if intraocular pressure plays a part in the pathogenic process of normal-tension glaucoma. METHODS: One eye of each eligible subject was randomized either to be untreated as a control or to have intraocular pressure lowered by 30% from baseline. Eyes were randomized if they met criteria for diagnosis of normal-tension glaucoma and showed documented progression or high-risk field defects that threatened fixation or the appearance of a new disk hemorrhage. The clinical course (visual field and optic disk) of the group with lowered intraocular pressure was compared with the clinical course when intraocular pressure remained at its spontaneous untreated level. RESULTS: One hundred-forty eyes of 140 patients were used in this study. Sixty-one were in the treatment group, and 79 were untreated controls. Twenty-eight (35%) of the control eyes and 7 (12%) of the treated eyes reached end points (specifically defined criteria of glaucomatous optic disk progression or visual field loss). An overall survival analysis showed a statistically significant difference between the two groups (P < .0001). The mean survival time ± SD of the treated group was 2,688 ± 123 days and for the control group, 1,695 ± 143 days. Of 34 cataracts developed during the study, 11 (14%) occurred in the control group and 23 (38%) in the treated group (P = .0075), with the highest incidence in those whose treatment included filtration surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Intraocular pressure is part of the pathogenic process in normal-tension glaucoma. Therapy that is effective in lowering intraocular pressure and free of adverse effects would be expected to be beneficial in patients who are at risk of disease progression.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0032189255
U2 - 10.1016/S0002-9394(98)00223-2
DO - 10.1016/S0002-9394(98)00223-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 9780093
AN - SCOPUS:0032189255
SN - 0002-9394
VL - 126
SP - 487
EP - 497
JO - American Journal of Ophthalmology
JF - American Journal of Ophthalmology
IS - 4
ER -