MedPath

Use of Bevacizumab in Trabeculectomy Surgery

Phase 4
Completed
Conditions
Glaucoma
Fibrosis
Optic Neuropathy
Interventions
Drug: Control
Registration Number
NCT01166594
Lead Sponsor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Brief Summary

When a patient with glaucoma who has a pressure that is too high and causing damage to their vision, despite receiving the maximum amount of medication that can be tolerated, the decision is made to have glaucoma surgery. Trabeculectomy is the most common form of glaucoma surgery used to treat open angle glaucoma. During trabeculectomy, an opening is created in the eye and partially covered with a flap of tissue. This new opening allows fluid to drain out of the eye bypassing the clogged drainage channels that are malfunctioning in patients with glaucoma. Studies have found that trabeculectomy significantly reduces vision loss and lowers eye pressure.

However, many people need another trabeculectomy or other glaucoma surgery because the surgery may fail either early or much later because the body closes the drain created by the surgeon. The surgery is also less likely to work in patients with darker pigmentation, children who have congenital glaucoma, people with difficult to control glaucoma with new blood vessels growing on the iris, diabetes or persons with prior eye surgery. As a result, the investigators need to find ways to improve the longterm survival of trabeculectomy surgery in all patients.

Detailed Description

The usual treatment is to not have an injection of Bevacizumab on the third through fifth day after trabeculectomy surgery. Topical anaesthetic drops to numb the eye will be given, prior to being given the tested medicine. Once the eye has been anaesthetized, the medication will be injected into the potential space created during the glaucoma surgery, also called a bleb, using a standard small syringe. The patient will receive an injection of either 1.25mg (0.05ml) of Bevacizumab or Balanced Salt Solution (BSS) into the trabeculectomy bleb that had been created in the surgery. Participants will be randomly (by chance) placed in one of the 2 study groups. There will be a 50% chance of being placed in either group. There will be 60 people who will participate in this study at 2 centres throughout the Toronto region. The length of this study for participants is 12 months, and the entire study is expected to take about 18 months to complete.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
59
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age more than 18 years old
  • Patients with glaucoma that is inadequately controlled on maximal tolerated medical therapy and scheduled for trabeculectomy surgery (with/without combined cataract extraction)
  • Decision makers fluent in English
  • Decision makers able to understand and read consent form
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients with active intraocular inflammation/uveitis or neovascular glaucoma
  • History of previous trabeculectomy surgery or prior retinal detachment with scleral buckle placement in the surgical eye
  • Aphakia in surgical eye
  • Pregnant and nursing women
  • Unable to fulfill inclusion criteria
  • Refusal of consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
ControlControlControl - BSS
BevacizumabBevacizumabTested Drug
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Intraocular PressureOne year

Intraocular pressure comparison between the two groups at one year following surgery. A window of ±14 days was allowed for the one-year visit

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Improved Bleb AppearanceOne year

Improved bleb appearance was formally graded according to the Indiana bleb-grading scheme at each visit.

The scheme has 4 sections: height of the bleb (H) with a range of H0 (flat bleb) to H4 (high bleb), horizontal extent of the bleb with a range of E0 (less than 1 clock hour) to E3 (more than 4 clock hours), vascularity of the bleb with a range of V0 (avascular) to V4 (extensive vascularity), and siedel test ranging from S0 (no leak) to S2 (streaming leak within 5 seconds).

Each section was individually scored. Ophthalmic photographs of the surgical site were taken with patient consent. The photographs only included a small portion of the eye and the patient cannot be identified by them.

The Number of Participants Who Received 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) InjectionsOne year

The number of participants who needed 5-FU injections during the first post-operative year for additional would modulation will be compared between the two groups.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Sunnybrook Hospital

🇨🇦

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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