Patient Population Under Consideration
This recommendation applies to adults who do not have vision symptoms who are seen in a primary care setting.
Assessment of Risk
Increased IOP, family history of glaucoma, older age, and African American race increase a person's risk for open-angle glaucoma1, 2. Recent evidence shows that glaucoma may be increased in Hispanics3.
Older African Americans have a higher prevalence of glaucoma and
perhaps a more rapid disease progression; if screening reduces vision
impairment, then African Americans would probably have greater absolute
benefit than whites.
Screening Tests
Diagnosis of POAG is based on a combination of tests showing
characteristic degenerative changes in the optic disc and defects in
visual fields (often loss in peripheral vision). Although increased IOP
was previously considered an important part of the definition of this
condition, it is now known that many persons with POAG do not have
increased IOP and not all persons with increased IOP have or will
develop glaucoma. Therefore, screening with tonometry alone may be
inadequate to detect all cases of POAG.
Measurement of visual fields can be difficult. The reliability of a
single measurement may be low; several consistent measurements are
needed to establish the presence of defects. Specialists use dilated
ophthalmoscopy or slit lamp examination to evaluate changes in the optic
disc; however, even experts have varying ability to detect glaucomatous
progression of the optic disc. In addition, no single standard exists
to define and measure progression of visual field defects. Most tests
that are available in a primary care setting do not have acceptable
accuracy to detect glaucoma.
Treatment
The initial aim and efficacy assessment of primary treatments of POAG
are reduction of IOP. Treatments include medication, laser therapy, and
surgery. These treatments also effectively reduce the longer-term
development and progression of small visual field defects as assessed by
clinical examination. However, the magnitude of the effectiveness in
reducing impairments in patient-reported, vision-related function,
including development of blindness, is uncertain.
Suggestions for Practice Regarding the I Statement
Potential Preventable Burden
Approximately 2.5 million persons in the United States have glaucoma,
and approximately 1.9% of adults older than 40 years have open-angle
glaucoma4.
Most persons with glaucoma have POAG. This condition is defined as
optic neuropathy with a visibly open anterior chamber angle (between the
iris and the anterior sclera or peripheral cornea) that is associated
with progressive death of retinal ganglion cells and axons and visual
field loss1, 2, 5.
The goal of screening programs is to identify and treat POAG before
visual impairment develops. The proportion of persons who are currently
unidentified and who will develop vision problems as a result of a
diagnosis obtained through screening is not known. The natural history
of glaucoma is heterogeneous and poorly defined.
In some persons, POAG does not progress or progression is so slow
that it never has an important effect on vision. The size of this
subgroup is uncertain and may depend on the ethnicity and age of the
population and initial findings of ophthalmologic testing. Screening in
asymptomatic persons is likely to increase the size of this subgroup.
Other patients have more rapid progression, as determined by optic nerve
damage, visual field defects, and development of visual impairment.
Whether early glaucoma will progress to visual impairment cannot be
precisely predicted. Whether the rate of progression of visual field
defects remains uniform throughout the course of glaucoma is also not
known. Older adults and African Americans seem to be at increased risk
and have more rapid progression. Persons with a short life expectancy
probably have little to gain from glaucoma screening.
Potential Harms
Harms caused by treatment of glaucoma include formation of cataracts
and those resulting from surgery and from topical medications.
Overdiagnosis and overtreatment are possible because not all persons who
are diagnosed with and treated for glaucoma progress to visual
impairment; the magnitude of overdiagnosis and overtreatment is unknown.
Costs
The cost of screening varies widely depending on the tests used.
Testing with hand-held tonometers and ophthalmoscopes can be done
quickly and inexpensively. However, the diagnostic accuracy of these
inexpensive tests is not known. According to the National Business Group
on Health, the average screening eye examination costs $716. Screening with specialized tests for glaucoma and with newer computerized instruments is more expensive.
Current Practice
Approximately 62% of Medicare patients enrolled in an HMO were screened for glaucoma in 20097. In 2008, approximately 53% of whites, 47% of African Americans, and 37% of Hispanics reported an annual eye care visit8.