Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2017)

Vision Loss and Recovery after Baerveldt Aqueous Tube Shunt Implantation

  • Esther Lee Kim,
  • Jeffrey Tran,
  • Marc Töteberg-Harms,
  • Jasdeep Chahal,
  • Douglas Rhee,
  • Vikas Chopra,
  • Brian Francis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/4140305
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2017

Abstract

Read online

This study aims to determine the course of vision loss after Baerveldt aqueous tube shunt placement and identify risk factors associated with unexplained severe long-term vision loss, or snuff-out. We retrospectively reviewed 247 eyes of 222 patients who underwent Baerveldt implantations at one of two academic institutions. Postoperative vision loss at 6 months following surgery was categorized as mild-to-moderate versus severe and long-term versus transient. Long-term vision loss, defined as 3 or more lines of Snellen visual acuity (VA) loss compared with preoperative VA, occurred in 63 of 247 eyes (25.5%), and 39 had mild-to-moderate and 24 had severe loss. Of these 63 eyes, 18 had no identifiable cause of vision loss. On multivariate analysis, poorer Snellen VA on postoperative day 1 (POD1) was found to be a significant risk factor for long-term vision loss (p=0.005). In addition, the negative change in preoperative versus POD1 Snellen VA (p=0.021) and the presence of split fixation involving the inferonasal quadrant on preoperative Humphrey visual field (p=0.044) were significant risk factors for snuff-out. Transient vision loss occurred in 76 of 242 eyes (30.8%). In conclusion, vision loss is not uncommon after Baerveldt surgery, with snuff-out occurring in 2.4% of cases in this study.