Michelessi Manuele, Bicket Amanda K, Lindsley Kristina
Ophthalmology, Fondazione G.B. Bietti per lo studio e la ricerca in Oftalmolologia-IRCCS, Via Livenza n 3, Rome, Italy, 00198.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Apr 25;4(4):CD009313. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009313.pub2.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness worldwide. It results in a progressive loss of peripheral vision and, in late stages, loss of central vision leading to blindness. Early treatment of glaucoma aims to prevent or delay vision loss. Elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is the main causal modifiable risk factor for glaucoma. Aqueous outflow obstruction is the main cause of IOP elevation, which can be mitigated either by increasing outflow or reducing aqueous humor production. Cyclodestructive procedures use various methods to target and destroy the ciliary body epithelium, the site of aqueous humor production, thereby lowering IOP. The most common approach is laser cyclophotocoagulation.
To assess the effectiveness and safety of cyclodestructive procedures for the management of non-refractory glaucoma (i.e. glaucoma in an eye that has not undergone incisional glaucoma surgery). We also aimed to compare the effect of different routes of administration, laser delivery instruments, and parameters of cyclophotocoagulation with respect to IOP control, visual acuity, pain control, and adverse events.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (which contains the Cochrane Eyes and Vision Trials Register) (2017, Issue 8); Ovid MEDLINE; Embase.com; LILACS; the metaRegister of Controlled Trials (mRCT) and ClinicalTrials.gov. The date of the search was 7 August 2017. We also searched the reference lists of reports from included studies.
We included randomized controlled trials of participants who had undergone cyclodestruction as a primary treatment for glaucoma. We included only head-to-head trials that had compared cyclophotocoagulation to other procedural interventions, or compared cyclophotocoagulation using different types of lasers, delivery methods, parameters, or a combination of these factors.
Two review authors independently screened search results, assessed risks of bias, extracted data, and graded the certainty of the evidence in accordance with Cochrane standards.
We included one trial (92 eyes of 92 participants) that evaluated the efficacy of diode transscleral cyclophotocoagulation (TSCPC) as primary surgical therapy. We identified no other eligible ongoing or completed trial. The included trial compared low-energy versus high-energy TSCPC in eyes with primary open-angle glaucoma. The trial was conducted in Ghana and had a mean follow-up period of 13.2 months post-treatment. In this trial, low-energy TSCPC was defined as 45.0 J delivered, high-energy as 65.5 J delivered; it is worth noting that other trials have defined high- and low-energy TSCPC differently. We assessed this trial to have had low risk of selection bias and reporting bias, unclear risk of performance bias, and high risk of detection bias and attrition bias. Trial authors excluded 13 participants with missing follow-up data; the analyses therefore included 40 (85%) of 47 participants in the low-energy group and 39 (87%) of 45 participants in the high-energy group.Control of IOP, defined as a decrease in IOP by 20% from baseline value, was achieved in 47% of eyes, at similar rates in the low-energy group and the high-energy groups; the small study size creates uncertainty about the significance of the difference, if any, between energy settings (risk ratio (RR) 1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.64 to 1.65; 79 participants; low-certainty evidence). The difference in effect between energy settings based on mean decrease in IOP, if any exists, also was uncertain (mean difference (MD) -0.50 mmHg, 95% CI -5.79 to 4.79; 79 participants; low-certainty evidence).Decreased vision was defined as the proportion of participants with a decrease of 2 or more lines on the Snellen chart or one or more categories of visual acuity when unable to read the eye chart. Twenty-three percent of eyes had a decrease in vision. The size of any difference between the low-energy group and the high-energy group was uncertain (RR 1.22, 95% CI 0.54 to 2.76; 79 participants; low-certainty evidence). Data were not available for mean visual acuity and proportion of participants with vision change defined as greater than 1 line on the Snellen chart.The difference in the mean number of glaucoma medications used after cyclophotocoagulation was similar when comparing treatment groups (MD 0.10, 95% CI -0.43 to 0.63; 79 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). Twenty percent of eyes were retreated; the estimated effect of energy settings on the need for retreatment was inconclusive (RR 0.76, 95% CI 0.31 to 1.84; 79 participants; low-certainty evidence). No data for visual field, cost effectiveness, or quality-of-life outcomes were reported by the trial investigators.Adverse events were reported for the total study population, rather than by treatment group. The trial authors stated that most participants reported mild to moderate pain after the procedure, and many had transient conjunctival burns (percentages not reported). Severe iritis occurred in two eyes and hyphema occurred in three eyes. No instances of hypotony or phthisis bulbi were reported. The only adverse outcome that was reported by the treatment group was atonic pupil (RR 0.89 in the low-energy group, 95% CI 0.47 to 1.68; 92 participants; low-certainty evidence).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to evaluate the relative effectiveness and safety of cyclodestructive procedures for the primary procedural management of non-refractory glaucoma. Results from the one included trial did not compare cyclophotocoagulation to other procedural interventions and yielded uncertainty about any difference in outcomes when comparing low-energy versus high-energy diode TSCPC. Overall, the effect of laser treatment on IOP control was modest and the number of eyes experiencing vision loss was limited. More research is needed specific to the management of non-refractory glaucoma.
青光眼是全球失明的主要原因。它会导致周边视力逐渐丧失,在晚期会导致中心视力丧失并最终失明。青光眼的早期治疗旨在预防或延缓视力丧失。眼压升高是青光眼主要的可改变致病风险因素。房水流出受阻是眼压升高的主要原因,可通过增加房水流出或减少房水生成来缓解。睫状体破坏手术使用各种方法靶向并破坏睫状体上皮(房水生成部位),从而降低眼压。最常见的方法是激光睫状体光凝术。
评估睫状体破坏手术治疗非难治性青光眼(即未接受过青光眼切开手术的眼睛中的青光眼)的有效性和安全性。我们还旨在比较不同给药途径、激光传输器械以及睫状体光凝参数在眼压控制、视力、疼痛控制和不良事件方面的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(其中包含Cochrane眼科和视力试验注册库)(2017年第8期);Ovid MEDLINE;Embase.com;LILACS;对照试验元注册库(mRCT)和ClinicalTrials.gov。检索日期为2017年8月7日。我们还检索了纳入研究报告的参考文献列表。
我们纳入了将睫状体破坏作为青光眼主要治疗方法的参与者的随机对照试验。我们仅纳入了将睫状体光凝术与其他手术干预进行比较,或比较使用不同类型激光、传输方法、参数或这些因素组合的睫状体光凝术的直接对比试验。
两位综述作者独立筛选检索结果、评估偏倚风险、提取数据,并根据Cochrane标准对证据的确定性进行分级。
我们纳入了一项试验(92名参与者的92只眼睛),该试验评估了二极管经巩膜睫状体光凝术(TSCPC)作为主要手术治疗方法的疗效。我们未识别出其他符合条件的正在进行或已完成的试验。纳入的试验比较了原发性开角型青光眼患者眼中低能量与高能量TSCPC的效果。该试验在加纳进行,治疗后平均随访期为13.2个月。在该试验中,低能量TSCPC定义为传递45.0焦耳能量,高能量定义为传递65.5焦耳能量;值得注意的是,其他试验对高能量和低能量TSCPC的定义不同。我们评估该试验的选择偏倚和报告偏倚风险较低,实施偏倚风险不明确,检测偏倚和失访偏倚风险较高。试验作者排除了13名随访数据缺失的参与者;因此,分析纳入了低能量组47名参与者中的40名(85%)和高能量组45名参与者中的39名(87%)。眼压控制定义为眼压从基线值降低20%,47%的眼睛实现了眼压控制,低能量组和高能量组的发生率相似;由于研究规模较小,能量设置之间差异(若有)的显著性存在不确定性(风险比(RR)1.03,95%置信区间(CI)0.64至1.65;79名参与者;低确定性证据)。基于眼压平均降低情况,能量设置之间(若存在)的效果差异也不确定(平均差(MD)-0.50 mmHg,95% CI -5.79至4.79;79名参与者;低确定性证据)。视力下降定义为在Snellen视力表上下降2行或更多行的参与者比例,或者在无法阅读视力表时视力下降一个或多个等级的参与者比例。23%的眼睛出现视力下降。低能量组和高能量组之间差异的大小不确定(RR 1.22,95% CI 0.54至2.76;79名参与者;低确定性证据)。关于平均视力以及在Snellen视力表上视力变化大于1行的参与者比例的数据不可用。比较治疗组时,睫状体光凝术后使用青光眼药物的平均数量差异相似(MD 0.10,95% CI -0.43至0.63;79名参与者;中等确定性证据)。20%的眼睛需要再次治疗;能量设置对再次治疗需求的估计效果尚无定论(RR 0.76,95% CI 0.31至1.84;79名参与者;低确定性证据)。试验研究者未报告视野、成本效益或生活质量结果的数据。不良事件是针对整个研究人群报告的,而非按治疗组报告。试验作者指出,大多数参与者在手术后报告有轻度至中度疼痛,许多人有短暂的结膜烧伤(未报告百分比)。两只眼睛发生了严重虹膜炎,三只眼睛发生了前房积血。未报告低眼压或眼球痨的病例。治疗组报告的唯一不良结局是无张力瞳孔(低能量组RR 0.89,95% CI 0.47至1.68;92名参与者;低确定性证据)。
没有足够的证据来评估睫状体破坏手术对非难治性青光眼进行主要手术治疗的相对有效性和安全性。纳入的一项试验结果未将睫状体光凝术与其他手术干预进行比较,并且在比较低能量与高能量二极管TSCPC时,结果存在不确定性。总体而言,激光治疗对眼压控制的效果一般,视力丧失的眼睛数量有限。对于非难治性青光眼的治疗,还需要更多的研究。