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Effect of Corneal Hysteresis on the Rates of Microvasculature Loss in Glaucoma
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ogla.2022.08.010Abstract
Purpose
To investigate the association between corneal hysteresis (CH) and rates of optic nerve head whole image capillary density (wiCD) loss over time in open-angle glaucoma (OAG).Design
Observational cohort.Participants
One hundred seventy-four eyes (122 OAG and 52 glaucoma suspect eyes) from 112 patients over more than 2 years and 4 visits or more.Methods
Baseline CH measurements were acquired with the Ocular Response Analyzer. Linear mixed-effect models were designed to investigate the effect of CH, average intraocular pressure (IOP) during follow-up, and baseline visual field (VF) mean deviation (MD) on the rates of wiCD loss and circumpapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (cpRNFL) thinning over time, while adjusting for confounders. Interaction between CH or baseline MD and average IOP during follow-up were included in final models to evaluate the effect of baseline MD or average IOP during follow-up on structural changes for different values of CH.Main outcome measure
Effect of CH, IOP, and baseline MD on the rates of wiCD loss and cpRNFL thinning over time.Results
The average follow-up time was 3.9 years. In the multivariable model, non-Black race, higher average IOP during follow-up, lower baseline CH, lower baseline VF MD, and higher numbers of IOP-lowering medications were associated with faster rates of wiCD loss over time. For CH values 6 mmHg and 12 mmHg, every 1-mmHg increase in average IOP during follow-up was associated with 0.23% per year faster and 0.07% per year slower rates of wiCD loss over time, respectively. While every 1-mmHg decrease in CH was associated with 1.89% per year faster rate of wiCD loss for MD of -12 dB, it was associated with 0.81% per year faster rate of wiCD loss for MD of -3 dB.Conclusion
Lower CH values were significantly associated with faster rates of wiCD loss over time. In eyes with lower CH, both higher average IOP during follow-up and more severe glaucoma damage at baseline were associated with faster rates of wiCD loss and cpRNFL thinning. These results support CH as a useful parameter for risk assessment of glaucoma progression.Financial disclosure(s)
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