One-year follow-up results of combined mitomycin C trabeculectomy and extracapsular cataract extraction.

PURPOSE When patients with glaucoma require cataract surgery, combined procedures offer important advantages over cataract surgery alone. Because mitomycin C has improved the success rate of a trabeculectomy in patients at high risk for filtration failure, the authors investigated whether it also would increase the survival rate of functioning filters in combined procedures. METHODS Patients with both cataract and glaucoma underwent combined mitomycin C trabeculectomy, extracapsular cataract extraction, and intraocular lens implantation. Mitomycin C (0.5 mg/ml) was applied topically to the trabeculectomy site for 5 minutes before the cataract extraction. Intraocular pressure (IOP), visual acuity, and astigmatism were measured preoperatively and postoperatively. One-year results are available for 74 patients. RESULTS At 1 year, 54 (73%) of 74 patients had IOPs of 15 mmHg or less without glaucoma medications. Visual acuity was 20/40 or better in 44 (60%) of 74 patients. Ten (15%) patients had a shift of more than 2 diopters of astigmatism against the rule compared with preoperative values. No notable corneal epithelial toxicity was present. Postoperative symptomatic hypotony with the wound construction occurred in 3 (4%) of 74 patients, with 1 patient requiring surgical revision. Other potential complications of mitomycin C include endothelial toxicity (1 patient had decreased vision due to endothelial folds) and wound stability (1 patient had wound rupture after direct ocular trauma). CONCLUSION The 1-year survival rate of a functioning trabeculectomy using mitomycin C in combined glaucoma and cataract surgery is encouraging. The longer-term benefits and possible adverse effects of mitomycin C in combined procedures are unknown and continue to be investigated.