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PURPOSE: To present the outcomes and factors affecting the success of trabeculectomy performed as the first surgery in primary pediatric glaucoma. METHODS: Pediatric patients with primary glaucoma who underwent trabeculectomy as the first surgery were retrospectively reviewed. Age, gender, preoperative intraocular pressure (IOP), operation age, axial length, corneal diameter, anterior segment findings, antimetabolite used, complications, and 1-month, 3-months, 1-year, and most recent postoperative findings were recorded. Postoperative IOP with/without medication of 18 mmHg or less was considered successful. Factors that may have affected surgical success were also evaluated using multivariate analysis. RESULTS: Included in the study were 48 patients, of whom 30 had primary congenital glaucoma and 18 had juvenile glaucoma. The mean preoperative IOP was 36.84 ± 6.30 mmHg, and the mean follow-up time was 7.95 ± 6.93 years. The median operation age value was 100.00 ± 100.83 (median: 60; IQR: 153) months. The postoperative IOP at the 1-month, 3-months, 1-year, and most recent follow-ups were 15.39 ± 6.88, 15.70 ± 7.36, 16.28 ± 7.86, and 17.48 ± 8.44 mmHg, respectively (p = 0.565). While there were no postoperative complications in 24 of the patients (50.0%), the most common complications were choroidal detachment and hypotony. Postoperative complication development was found to be significant as a factor affecting surgical success in the multivariate logistic regression analysis. Surgical success rates for all of the patients were 71.7%, 65.9%, 65.0%, and 61.4% at the 1-month, 3-months, 1-year, and most recent follow-ups, respectively. A significant difference was found between the congenital and juvenile groups in terms of surgical success only at 3 months (p = 0.953, p = 0.042, p = 0.191, p = 0.218; respectively). DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: The fact that surgical success was partially higher in the juvenile group confirmed the idea that the results of trabeculectomy will be more favorable in patients of older age and without anterior segment anomalies.
Department of Ophthalmology, Ankara Training and Research Hospital, Ankara, Turkey.
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