The old fix does not always hold
Doctors have long used laser peripheral iridotomy (a small laser hole in the iris to relieve eye pressure) to open that drainage angle. The idea is simple. Poke a tiny opening so fluid can move freely and the angle pops open.
It works for many people. But eye doctors have wondered for years if the fix really lasts.
This new analysis tried to answer that. It followed people five years after treatment to see what happened.
Researchers looked at data from a randomized trial in Singapore. Of 480 "angle-closure suspects," 375 finished the full five years. Each person had the laser done in only one eye, so their untreated eye served as a comparison.
Here is what stood out. About 33% of the treated eyes still had a closed angle after five years. That is roughly one in three.
But the laser clearly helped. Compared with the untreated eye, the laser reduced the chance of persistent closure by almost 90%. So the treatment did its job for most people, just not everyone.
The twist hiding in the iris
Why did some eyes stay narrow despite the laser? The team ran deeper imaging on 130 of the participants and found two strong clues.
The first was iris thickness. Eyes with a thicker iris at the start were much more likely to keep closing. For every small increase in thickness, the odds of persistent closure climbed sharply.
The second was age. Younger patients had higher odds of staying closed, not lower. That sounds backwards, but younger eyes have different anatomy and may behave differently under pressure.
A thicker iris in an already narrow eye was the strongest red flag for treatment failure.
The lock and key picture
Think of the drainage angle as a door held open by a spring. The laser opens a side vent to take pressure off the door. For most people, that relieves the push and the door swings wide.
But if the iris is unusually thick, it is like trying to swing open a heavy, padded door. The side vent helps, yet the door still sags back toward closed.
That is the mechanism the imaging data hints at. The laser cannot overcome every kind of eye anatomy. Thicker iris tissue seems to keep pushing the drain shut.
What the scans actually tracked
The researchers used anterior segment imaging to measure fine details of the eye's front chamber. One key measurement was iris thickness at 750 micrometers from a specific landmark called the scleral spur. That is a standard checkpoint for angle-closure risk.
They also tracked angle width over time. The good news is that the angle widened within the first two years after the laser and then stayed stable. So when the laser works, it tends to keep working.
If you or a family member has been told you are an "angle-closure suspect," this study should change how the conversation goes. The laser remains useful. It meaningfully cuts the risk of the angle staying closed over five years.
But it is not automatic. About a third of treated eyes may need closer monitoring or additional steps down the road.
The practical takeaway. Before deciding on the laser, ask your eye doctor to measure iris thickness and angle width with imaging. If both red flags are present, you and your doctor can plan for closer follow-up instead of assuming the laser alone solved the problem.
Honest limits of the data
This was a subanalysis of a single randomized trial in an Asian population in Singapore. Angle anatomy differs across ancestry, so the numbers may not translate directly to every group.
Also, only 130 of the 375 five-year participants had complete imaging. That shrinks the pool used to hunt for predictors. The findings are useful signals, not final verdicts.
And "persistent angle closure" was defined by gonioscopy, a specific clinic exam. Other definitions could yield other numbers.
Future studies will likely focus on eyes with thicker irises to see whether different treatment choices, like early lens removal or different laser settings, work better for that subgroup. Imaging before treatment may also become more routine.
For now, the message is simpler. The laser still helps most people. But the eye's own anatomy has the final say.