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Volume 101, Issue 8, Pages 1456-1463 (1 August 1994)


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Intermediate-term results of a randomized clinical trial of the 350- versus the 500-mm2 Baerveldt implant

Lloyd M.A.a, Baerveldt G.a, Fellenbaum P.S.a, Sidoti P.A.a, Minckler D.S.a, Martone J.F.a, LaBree L.a, Heuer D.K.a

Background

The Baerveldt glaucoma implant is a large equatorial aqueous shunting device that is installed through a single-quadrant conjunctival incision. The intermediate-term results of a randomized study comparing the 350- and 500-mm2 Baerveldt implants are reported.

Methods

Seventy-three patients with medically uncontrollable, nonneovascular glaucomas associated with aphakia, pseudophakia, or failed filters were enrolled in a randomized, prospective study comparing 350- and 500-mm2 Baerveldt implants. Surgical success was defined as 6 mmHg < OR = final intraocular pressure < OR = 21 mmHg without glaucoma reoperation or devastating complication.

Results

Of patients with 350- and 500-mm2 implants, 93% and 88%, respectively, achieved surgical success (18-month life-table analysis, P = 0.93). The 500-mm2 implants afforded intraocular pressure control with significantly fewer medications (0.7 versus 1.3; P = 0.006). The postoperative visual acuities remained within one line of the preoperative visual acuities or improved in 62% and 66% of patients in the 350- and 500-mm2 groups, respectively (P = 0.93). Complication rates were statistically similar. The most frequent ones in the 350- and 500-mm2 groups, respectively, were serous choroidal effusion (16% and 32%), strabismus (16% and 19%), anterior uveitis (14% and 11%), and corneal or corneal graft edema (11% each).

Conclusion

The intermediate-term results of the 350- and 500-mm2 Baerveldt implants were statistically comparable with respect to surgical and visual outcomes, as well as complications, although the larger implant was associated with a higher rate of some complications. However, the 500-mm2 Baerveldt implant afforded intraocular pressure control with fewer medications than the 350-mm2 implant.

a Department of Ophthalmology, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, USA

PII: S0161-6420(94)31152-3

doi:10.1016/S0161-6420(94)31152-3


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