Introduction: Glaucoma medications are often preserved with agents such as benzalkonium chloride, which commonly lead to ocular surface diseases.Purpose: To investigate the effect of switching to a preservative-free prostaglandin analogue, tafluprost 0.0015% on treatment tolerability and ocular surface diseases.Study design: This was a prospective, open-label, non-randomised, observational study performed in a single hospital.Materials and methods: This study involved patients of Asian descent diagnosed with primary open-angle glaucoma and ocular hypertension (n = 28), who received preserved prostaglandin monotherapy for longer than 3 months and had a National Eye Institute ocular surface staining scale score higher than 1. Patients were switched from preserved prostaglandin monotherapy to preservative-free tafluprost 0.0015%. Patients were analysed at baseline (Visit 0), 1 month (Visit 1), and 3 months (Visit 2). The main parameter measured is the change in the fluorescein staining score at Visit 2.Results: There was a significant improvement in the fluorescein staining score, with a mean reduction score of 1.96 (standard deviation, SD = 1.53; p < 0.0001), and significant reductions in conjunctival hyperaemia (bulbar, p < 0.0001; palpebral, p < 0.05) from baseline to Visit 2. The Ocular Surface Disease Index questionnaire also showed a mean reduction of 4.14 from baseline to visit 2 (SD = 8.20; p < 0.05). The intraocular pressure and tear breakup time were maintained from baseline to Visit 2.Conclusion: Switching patients to preservative-free tafluprost 0.0015% showed significant improvements in ocular surface disease with minimal side effects and similar intraocular pressure reduction rates.
Background Preserved prostaglandin analogs (PGAs) have been linked to ocular surface disease (OSD). While the benefits of preservative-low (PL) or -free (PF) Tafluprost (Santen Inc., Japan) were reported in real-world studies in Western countries, this is the first study in Asia to assess the effectiveness and safety of switching from preserved PGA to PL or PF-Tafluprost. Methods We conducted a meta-analysis on studies that included adults (>18 years of age) with a Corneal Fluorescein Staining Score (CFS) >1. These individuals had switched to PL or PF-tafluprost after using a preserved PGA therapy for at least 3 months for glaucoma and were identified from Santen’s tafluprost study database. A total of six studies from South Korea, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan were pooled for analysis. Results An intraocular pressure (IOP) reduction of 5.9% (0.91 mmHg) was seen in 265 patients. However, this result was not statistically significant (95% CI: −3.64, 1.81; Figure 1). Among 132 patients, a 47.9% reduction in the CFS (95% CI: −3.65, −1.91) was seen. Tear film break-up (n=183) significantly increased by 1.06 seconds (95% CI: 0.65, 1.47). In 88 patients, the bulbar conjunctiva score decreased by −0.46 (95% CI: −0.81, −0.10) and palpebral conjunctiva score decreased by −0.42 (95% CI: −0.67–0.17). One or more new adverse reactions were reported in 3% of the individuals after switching. Conclusion Tafluprost IOP reduction is comparable to other PGAs, with significant improvements in the ocular surface and minimal adverse reactions which were already previously reported.
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