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October
17, 2005
Researchers Show Beneficial Role Of Risk
Calculator In Fighting Progression of Glaucoma
By Eileen Callahan
A new glaucoma
risk calculator, which estimates a patient’s risk of converting
from high eye pressure, or ocular hypertension, to glaucoma,
will help physicians determine whether to initiate therapy for
patients. High eye pressure is the leading risk factor for glaucoma,
and is the only modifiable one. If glaucoma is untreated, vision
loss may continue, leading to blindness in some individuals.
“The risk assessment
idea came to me after studying the cardiovascular model which
measures cholesterol to determine whether or not to initiate
a statin for cholesterol lowering by assessing cholesterol,
age, blood pressure, and other risk factors,” said Robert
N. Weinreb, M.D., Director of the Hamilton Glaucoma Center at
University of California, San Diego and Distinguished Professor
of Ophthalmology at the UCSD School of Medicine, and co-developer
of the calculator. “The glaucoma risk calculator is a
tool which allows doctors to better assess patient risk levels
and, if needed, recommend treatment options that can help decrease
the progression of glaucoma in patients with ocular hypertension.”
The risk calculator
model will be reported at the American Academy of Ophthalmology
annual meeting October 17 in Chicago, Ill., by Weinreb and Felipe
A. Medeiros, M.D., Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology, at
the UCSD Hamilton Glaucoma Center, lead author of the study
demonstrating the risk calculator’s effectiveness.
Glaucoma, one of the
leading causes of blindness, is an eye disease in which damage
to the optic nerve located in the back of the eye results in
loss of eyesight. About half of patients with glaucoma have
ocular hypertension. Treatment depends on the degree or stage
of the glaucoma. Physicians might not prescribe any treatment
for ocular hypertension, for example, when increased pressure
in the eye is minimal and no nerve damage is present. Routine
monitoring of the patient’s peripheral vision and of the
appearance of the optic nerve may be sufficient.
The glaucoma risk calculator
is based on data collected from the multi-center National Eye
Institute-sponsored Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study, which
identified key patient risk factors (older age, high intraocular
pressure, thinner central corneal thickness, larger vertical
cup/disc ratio measurements and higher pattern standard deviation)
predictive of disease progression from ocular hypertension to
glaucoma. Although the OHT study results have provided a better
understanding of the risk factors involved in the progression
from ocular hypertension to glaucoma, physicians still face
the challenge of combining these factors to assess individual
patients.
Drs. Weinreb and Medeiros
have taken these key factors and examined them in an independent
population of 126 untreated patients studied at the Hamilton
Glaucoma Center. The Scoring Tool for Assessing Risk (STAR)
a five-year glaucoma risk assessment tool determines an individual
patient’s overall risk of developing glaucoma. Physicians
assess the six key risk factors and position their findings
at various points on the tool, which can help them determine
the risk of conversion from ocular hypertension to glaucoma
within the next five years.
“A collective assessment of these risk factors helps physicians
identify those patients with elevated eye pressure who are more
likely to progress to glaucoma and may benefit from early treatment,”
said Medeiros.
By identifying patients with a higher chance of developing damage,
the risk calculator can help physicians make decisions leading
to more rational treatment of patients at highest risk, as well
as discontinuing treatment and monitoring of patients at lowest
risk. This could result in greater consistency in treatment,
improving quality of care for patients with ocular hypertension
and a decrease in patients who go on to develop glaucoma.
The risk calculator
research was supported by an independent research grant from
Pfizer, Inc. The risk calculator research was validated in an
independent population—as part of a study by the National
Eye Institute sponsored by Diagnostic Innovations in Glaucoma
Study.
Media Contact: Eileen
Callahan (619) 543-6163
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