Doctors studied a new way to perform two eye surgeries at once for patients with advanced glaucoma. The procedure combined cataract removal with the placement of a tiny glaucoma drainage device in a specific location. The study included 12 Black and Afro-Latino patients, a group often underrepresented in eye research, and followed them for six months after surgery.
At the six-month check-up, the average pressure inside the eye had dropped by about 18%, and patients needed far fewer daily eye-drop medications. Their peripheral vision, which is often damaged by glaucoma, remained stable. Five of the twelve patients achieved very low pressure with minimal medication, a result doctors aim for. No serious complications like double vision were reported, though some patients had temporary low pressure after surgery.
It is very important to understand that this was a very small, preliminary study. With only 12 patients and a short follow-up period, doctors cannot yet say how well this surgery works long-term or for most people. The results are a first step that shows the technique might be safe and feasible in the short term.
Readers should see this as an early report on a surgical method being explored for a complex condition. It does not prove the surgery is effective, and it is not a treatment recommendation. More research with many more patients over several years is necessary before doctors will know if this is a reliable option.