Purpose To investigate optic disc hemorrhage (DH)’s clinical implications to subsequent progression of primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) in cases of mild-to-moderate myopia. Design Retrospective comparative study. Participants (1) Fifty-nine (59) myopic (26.5 mm > axial length [AXL] 24.0 mm) POAG patients with DH and (2) 59 age-, AXL-, and mean deviation (MD) of visual field (VF)-matched controls without DH were evaluated over the course of a minimum 3.5 years of follow up. For clear assessment of the effect of DH on progression of glaucoma, the patients selected for inclusion in the study were those with stable IOP (i.e., those showing an at least 20% reduction relative to the baseline IOP) whose IOP-lowering medication was not increased, supplemented or changed during the follow-up period. Methods The patients’ optic disc/retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) photographs were independently evaluated by three glaucoma specialists for structural progression of glaucoma. Event-based analysis with Guided Progression Analysis (GPA) software was used to determine their functional progression. The durations of structural and functional progression were compared by Kaplan-Meier life survival analyses. Main outcome measures Optic disc/RNFL progression and VF progression. Results The mean follow-up periods between the DH and non-DH groups were not significantly different: in the DH group, 5.6±2.7 years; in the non-DH group, 5.4±2.6 years (P = 0.588). In the DH group, 30 (50.8%) of 59 eyes manifested optic disc/RNFL deterioration; in the non-DH group, however, only 17 (28.8%) of 59 eyes showed structural progression. For the DH group, the cumulative probability of structural glaucoma progression was significantly greater than for the non-DH group (P = 0.001; log rank test). Interestingly, the two groups did not significantly differ in the cumulative probability of functional progression (P = 0.79; log rank test): in the DH group, VF progression was observed in 14 eyes (23.7%); in the non-DH group, in 12 eyes (20.3%). Conclusions DH was associated with a greater probability of structural progression in medically well-controlled-IOP POAG eyes with mild-to-moderate myopia. However, the relevance of DH to VF progression was not clear over the course of the average 5.5-year duration of the study.
CITATION STYLE
Ha, A., Kim, Y. K., Jeoung, J. W., & Park, K. H. (2017). Impact of optic disc hemorrhage on subsequent glaucoma progression in mild-to-moderate myopia. PLoS ONE, 12(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189706
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