Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Adherence, Patient
  • Glaucoma
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 21 years and 100 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Trabeculectomy is the most common operation performed for all forms of glaucoma. The procedure depends upon appropriately modulated healing of the conjunctiva and sclera, a major component of which is delivery of frequent topical corticosteroid eye drops (prednisolone acetate 1%) by the patient, ini...

Trabeculectomy is the most common operation performed for all forms of glaucoma. The procedure depends upon appropriately modulated healing of the conjunctiva and sclera, a major component of which is delivery of frequent topical corticosteroid eye drops (prednisolone acetate 1%) by the patient, initially every 2 hours when awake for 1-2 weeks, then in tapering frequency over the 6 weeks after surgery. While the initial success of trabeculectomy at one year varies from 55-80% depending upon the criteria chosen to measure outcome, improvements in success would benefit hundreds of thousands of patients in the USA yearly. There is reasonable evidence that steroid drops benefit success, but there is essentially no data on how successfully patients remember to take the drops. In previous research, investigators have shown that glaucoma patients take only half to two-thirds of prescribed drops. An electronic monitoring device is now available that can fit the eye drop bottle used in steroid drops, accurately measuring the time and date of each drop taken. The investigators can further assess the accuracy with which each patient can deliver a drop from the bottle being monitored in a clinic session directly onto the eye's surface by observing their performance. The proposal's hypothesis is that the one year success rate of the procedure will be related to the adherence to steroid drop taking by patients. The outcome will have two important benefits. First, if adherence is less than ideal (which is very likely), then those with greater adherence will have more successful surgery, confirming that steroid treatment is effective. This has only been measured once, 30 years ago, at a time when trabeculectomy was being performed quite differently. If steroid treatment is not related to success, a change in preferred practice patterns is in order. If steroid treatment is related to success and adherence is variable, the investigation will have proven means to increase adherence through reminder systems, which have shown in past randomized clinical trial to be effective.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03402802
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Harry A Quigley, MD Professor