Results of childhood glaucoma surgery over a long‐term period
Esther M. Hoffmann, Fidan Aghayeva, Alexander K. Schuster, Norbert Pfeiffer, Mona Karsten, Susann Schweiger, Nina Pirlich, Felix Mathias Wagner, Panagiotis Chronopoulos, Franz Grehn
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate long-term results of glaucoma surgery in newborn and infants with glaucoma. METHODS: Seventy-nine eyes of 52 children (age: 3 weeks-15.3 years) with primary congenital or secondary glaucoma treated between 2015 and 2017 were included. The median follow-up time was 3.9 years. Conventional probe trabeculotomy, 360° catheter-assisted trabeculotomy, filtering and cyclodestructive surgery were compared. Strict criteria for surgical success were applied: Complete surgical success (IOP below target IOP, no further surgery) and incomplete surgical success (additional surgery allowed) were analyzed, and IOP at baseline and last follow-up was compared. RESULTS: Intraocular pressure (IOP) was significantly reduced in primary congenital (preoperative IOP: 27.8 ± 7.5 mmHg vs. postoperative IOP: 14.2 ± 4.5 mmHg) and secondary glaucoma (preoperative IOP: 29.2 ± 9.1 mmHg vs. postoperative IOP: 16.6 ± 4.7 mmHg). 90% of all eyes reached target IOP with or without medication allowing for additional surgeries. As first surgery, 360° catheter-assisted trabeculotomy had a tendency to higher surgical success than other surgical approaches, while cyclodestructive procedures had lowest. CONCLUSIONS: We found very promising surgical results in our childhood glaucoma patient group. Surgical success in both congenital and secondary glaucoma was high.