Control of intraocular pressure and fluctuation with fixed-combination brimonidine-timolol versus brimonidine or timolol monotherapy.

Journal: American Journal Of Ophthalmology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To evaluate control of intraocular pressure (IOP) and IOP fluctuation in patients with ocular hypertension or glaucoma treated with fixed-combination brimonidine-timolol compared with brimonidine or timolol monotherapy.

Methods: Post hoc analysis of data from 2 identical, 12-month, randomized, double-masked, multicenter trials. Methods: Patients were treated bilaterally with fixed brimonidine-timolol twice a day (n = 385), brimonidine tartrate 0.2% 3 times a day (n = 382), or timolol 0.5% twice a day (n = 392). Diurnal IOP was measured at follow-up visits at weeks 2 and 6 and months 3, 6, 9, and 12. IOP fluctuation was defined as the standard deviation of IOP measurements.

Results: The percentage of patients with mean diurnal IOP <18 mm Hg and short-term (daily) IOP fluctuation ≤2 mm Hg was statistically significantly higher in the brimonidine-timolol group than in the brimonidine or timolol group at each follow-up visit (at month 12, brimonidine-timolol 43.0%; brimonidine 18.9%, timolol 33.5%, P ≤ .017). At each hour (8 AM, 10 AM, 3 PM, and 5 PM), the percentage of patients with mean IOP <18 mm Hg and long-term (intervisit) IOP fluctuation ≤2 mm Hg was statistically significantly higher with brimonidine-timolol than with brimonidine or timolol alone (at 8 AM, brimonidine-timolol 41.0%, brimonidine 11.3%, timolol 23.7%, P < .001).

Conclusions: Patients treated with fixed-combination brimonidine-timolol were more likely than patients treated with either brimonidine or timolol alone to achieve a combination of low mean IOP and low short-term (daily) or long-term (intervisit) IOP fluctuation.

Authors
George Spaeth, Paula Bernstein, Joseph Caprioli, Rhett Schiffman

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