Original article
Does lacrimal duct occlusion decrease intraocular pressure in patients refractory to medical treatment for glaucoma?: A randomized, sham-controlled, crossover trial

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Abstract

We temporarily occluded lacrimal ducts with dissolvable collagen inserts in a randomized, double masked, sham-controlled crossover trial to test whether longer ocular contact of eye drops lowers intraocular pressure in patients with refractory glaucoma. Patients were randomized to the sequence temporary lacrimal duct occlusion → 21 day washout → sham occlusion (6 patients), or the reverse order (5 patients); all maintained their usual medication. Compliance was >90% for every patient as assessed by medication diaries kept by each patieent's medication partner. There was no treatment effect (bivariate Wilcoxon σ2 = 0.10, p = 0.95) or treatment-period interaction (σ2=2.87, p =0.24). However, whichever treatment was received first significantly lowered intraocular pressure (left eye first period X: [ipr50] = −3.0:[−6.0, −1.0] mmHg, right eye = −3.0:[−6.0, −1.01 mmHg, bivariate response x2 = 5.92, p = 0.05). Although lacrimal duct occlusion appears to have no clinical benefit, more careful supervision of eye drop administration may be efficacious for treating some patients with medically refractory glaucoma.

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Supported in part by the A. W. Mellon Foundation. Presented in part at the Southern Society of General Internal Medicine, New Orleans, La, 5 February 1988.

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