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December 29, 2020
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Risk for glaucoma continues to rise over time following cataract removal in infancy

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In children who underwent cataract removal in infancy, risk for glaucoma is high and continues to rise over a decade, with no difference observed in eyes implanted with an IOL compared with eyes left aphakic, according to a study.

Perspective from M. Edward Wilson, MD

Sharon F. Freedman MD, and colleagues published secondary analysis of the 114 children included in the Infant Aphakia Treatment Study (IATS), a 5-year multicenter trial sponsored by the National Eye Institute comparing the outcomes of unilateral cataract surgery with and without IOL implantation in infants aged 1 to 6 months. All children were seen once again as they reached the age of 10 years to evaluate the cumulative incidence of glaucoma and glaucoma suspect, the potential risk factors other than surgery, and the effects on the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL), optic nerve head (ONH) appearance and visual acuity.

In the IATS, children were assigned in equal number to IOL implantation or contact lens use. Two in each group were lost to follow-up. At the 10-year examination, 25 eyes (23%) had developed glaucoma and 21 (20%) were glaucoma suspect. In Kaplan-Meier analysis, the cumulative risk of glaucoma plus glaucoma suspect after cataract removal rose from 12% at 1 year to 31% at 5 years and to 40% at 10 years. No difference was found between eyes implanted or not implanted with an IOL, while small corneal diameter and younger age at surgery was independently associated with a higher risk of developing glaucoma.

By 10 years, approximately 50% of eyes with glaucoma or glaucoma suspect were treated with medications and 48% of eyes had undergone glaucoma surgery. OCT showed no significant decrease in RNFL thickness in eyes with glaucoma or glaucoma suspect and most ONH photographs appeared normal.

Visual acuity was similar among eyes with and without a diagnosis of glaucoma or glaucoma suspect but was better in children who had undergone surgery earlier. “Therefore, the desire to achieve maximum visual acuity must be counterbalanced against an increased risk of glaucoma or glaucoma suspect diagnosis in an infant with a unilateral congenital cataract,” the authors wrote.

This study, they noted, shows that lifelong surveillance for the development of glaucoma is important in children who underwent cataract surgery in infancy, “with the hope that early diagnosis and treatment may facilitate preservation of ONH health and maximal visual function.”