Efficacy and Safety of Gonioscopy Assisted Transluminal Trabeculotomy in Patients with Primary Open-angle Glaucoma and Cataract - a Randomized Clinical Trial
Prospective, randomized, , double-blind, clinical trial, comparing the variation of intraocular pressure (IOP) of patients with mild or moderate primary open-angle glaucoma (OAG) and cataract divided into three groups. All study participants should be treated for the pathology with one or more hypotensive medications or, regardless of the number of drugs, when IOP is greater than 20 mmHg and less than 26 mmHg. The two-year follow-up should also compare the reduction in the number of medications used, reoperation rate, adverse effects, visual acuity, endothelial loss, induction of astigmatism, variation in IOP according to axial diameter of the eye, anterior chamber and age, in addition to the existence of change in the quality of life of patients in the postoperative period
• Patients aged 40 years or older,
• Previously included in the glaucoma departments of the participating institutions,
• Indication for cataract surgery, diagnosed by clinical examination with visual acuity (VA) equal to or worse than 20/40,
• Primary Open Angle Glaucoma (POAG), determined by the presence of typical visual field (VF) defects and/or by the aspect of the optic nerve observed at fundoscopy or retinography (increased vertical optical excavation with thinning of the neural rhyme, asymmetry of the cup/disc ratio greater than 0.2, localized loss (notch) or defect in the retinal nerve fiber layer (Hoyt)).
• APIC classification with amplitude greater/equal to 2 and pigmentation less than 4 on gonioscopy.
• Intraocular pressure (IOP) less than or equal to 25 mmHg before washout of hypotensive eye drops.
• IOP between 22 and 30 mmHg after washout of hypotensive eye drops or with a history of IOP greater than or equal to 21 mmHg in more than one previous care described in the medical record.