advertisement

Topcon

Abstract #3642 Published in IGR 4-2

The National Survey of Trabeculectomy. III. Early and late complications

Edmunds B; Thompson JR; Salmon JF; Wormald RP
Eye 2002; 16: 297-303


PURPOSE: There is a considerable body of literature relating to trabeculectomy, however, there are no data representative of the national experience of trabeculectomy in the UK. The Department of Health funded a national survey of trabeculectomy to establish current practice patterns and the outcome of trabeculectomy in the National Health Service (NHS). In this paper, the authors present the reported complications of first-time trabeculectomy from a nationally representative cohort of patients with chronic open-angle glaucoma. METHODS: A cross-sectional study of consultant ophthalmologists performing trabeculectomy in the NHS. Participants recruited their four most recent consecutive first-time trabeculectomy cases with chronic open-angle glaucoma according to study eligibility criteria and data were collected by self-administered questionnaire. FOLLOW-UP: One year post-trabeculectomy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: occurrence of early and late complications. RESULTS: Clinical outcome data were available for 1240 (85.3%) of cases. Early complications were reported in 578 (46.6%) cases and late complications in 512 (42.3%) cases. Some cases had more than one complication. The most frequent early complications were hyphema (n = 304, 24.6%), shallow anterior chamber (n = 296, 23.9%), hypotony (n = 296, 24.3%), wound leak (n = 216, 17.8%), and choroidal detachment (n = 175, 14.1%). The most frequent late complications were cataract (n = 251, 20.2%), visual loss (n = 230, 18.8%) and encapsulated bleb (n = 42, 3.4%). The occurrence of most complications was not associated with a consultant's specialist interest, level of activity, type of hospital or region. Encapsulated bleb was reported more frequently in a university hospital setting. CONCLUSIONS: The complication rates reported in this paper represent the national experience of first-time trabeculectomy for open angle glaucoma in the UK. These are similar to previous published studies and highlight in particular, the impact of trabeculectomy on visual acuity in the first year following surgery. This survey provides valid and clinically relevant data on the complications of trabeculectomy for the production of guidelines and standards for audit at regional, local and individual level.

Dr. B. Edmunds, Royal College of Ophthalmologists London, UK


Classification:

12.8.1 Without tube implant (Part of: 12 Surgical treatment > 12.8 Filtering surgery)



Issue 4-2

Change Issue


advertisement

WGA Rescources