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. 2012 Feb;28(1):26-32.
doi: 10.1089/jop.2011.0081. Epub 2011 Oct 17.

Peak intraocular pressure and glaucomatous progression in primary open-angle glaucoma

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Free article

Peak intraocular pressure and glaucomatous progression in primary open-angle glaucoma

Anastasios G P Konstas et al. J Ocul Pharmacol Ther. 2012 Feb.
Free article

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the effect of 24-h peak intraocular pressure (IOP) on the progression of primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and the 24 h time points that best predict peak pressure.

Methods: A retrospective analysis of clinical data evaluating long-term glaucomatous progression in patients with POAG who were previously in a 24-h study of the authors (IOP readings at 2/6/10 A.M. and 2/6/10 PM); had ≥3 treated 10 A.M. (±1 h) IOP measurements over 5-years after an untreated 24-h baseline; and had a treated 24-h curve with a 10 A.M. IOP±2 mmHg within the 10 A.M. mean IOP over 5-years.

Results: We included 98 nonprogressed and 53 progressed patients with POAG (n=151). The mean 24-h peak IOP (mmHg) was 19.9±2.7 for progressed and 18.3±2.0 for nonprogressed patients (P<0.001). Progressed patients also showed a higher mean 24-h IOP. Generally, patients with a mean or peak daytime (readings at 10 A.M., 2 and 6 P.M.) or 24-h peak IOP of ≤18 remained nonprogressed in 75%-78% of cases. Further, measuring IOP at night found a higher peak in only 20% of cases, which was ≤2 of the daytime peak in 98% of cases. A multivariate regression analysis showed only 24-h peak IOP as an independent risk factor for progression (P=0.002).

Conclusions: This study suggests that daytime peak IOP may be clinically important in predicting long-term glaucomatous progression. Further, daytime peak IOP may assist, as much as daytime mean IOP and, in most cases, 24-h peak IOP, in helping to guide long-term treatment in POAG.

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