Glaucoma worsens faster in longer eyes

15 Jan 2025
Glaucoma worsens faster in longer eyes

Glaucoma tends to be more severe and to progress quicker in the longer eye when there is an axial length difference of >1.0 mm, reveals a study. 

Between 2010 and 2020, 95 patients (mean age 51.2 years) with a diagnosis of glaucoma in both eyes with an axial length difference of >1.00 mm at Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea, were included in this long-term observational study. 

A total of 190 eyes were analysed and classified into longer and shorter eyes. The research team then used the paired T-test and McNemar test to examine the baseline and follow-up clinical data of the participants. Differences in clinical characteristics in patients with asymmetric axial length served as the primary endpoint. 

Over a mean follow-up of 10.1 years, no difference was observed in baseline intraocular pressure (IOP) or central corneal thickness between longer and shorter eyes. 

Longer eyes tended to have larger ovality index, β-zone, and γ-zone parapapillary atrophy (PPA) area (p<0.001) among the baseline disc parameters. Longer eyes also showed thinner retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness (p=0.009) and ganglion cell–inner plexiform layer (GCIPL) thickness (p<0.001) in the baseline OCT data. 

Moreover, the results of a baseline visual field (VF) test showed significantly lower mean deviation (p<0.001) and VF index (VFI) values (p=0.034) in the longer eyes. 

Analysis of glaucoma progression revealed a greater rate of change of superior GCIPL (longer eyes: –0.65 μm/year; shorter eyes: –0.40 μm/year; p=0.006), mean deviation (longer eyes: –0.40 dB/year; shorter eyes: –0.21 dB/year; p=0.005), and VFI (longer eyes: –0.92 percent/year; shorter eyes: –0.46 percent/year; p<0.001) in the longer eyes. 

Additionally, the greater the difference in IOP fluctuation, the greater the difference in the rate of change between mean deviation and VFI,” the researchers said.

Ophthalmology 2025;132:39-51