Prescribing trends of anti glaucoma medication usage in treatment naive patients of primary open angle glaucoma in a tertiary care hospital in Eastern India

Authors

  • Aditi Maitra Department of Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology, Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine, Kolkata, West Bengal, India
  • Shashwat Bhattacharyya Department of Ophthalmology, Calcutta National Medical College, Kolkata, India
  • Shatavisha Mukherjee Department of Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology, Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine, Kolkata, West Bengal, India
  • Nikhil Era Department of Pharmacology, MGM Medical College, Kishangunj, Bihar, India
  • Sambuddha Ghosh Department of Ophthalmology, Calcutta National Medical College, Kolkata, India
  • Santanu Kumar Tripathi Department of Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology, Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine, Kolkata, West Bengal, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2319-2003.ijbcp20181645

Keywords:

Anti-glaucoma medications, Glaucoma management, Prescribing trends, Primary open angle glaucoma

Abstract

Background: Primary open angle glaucoma remains a high magnitude healthcare problem due to its prevalence and chronicity. The real world scenario of anti glaucoma medical therapy needs periodical auditing as far as drug prescriptions are concerned for formulation of treatment guidelines. Few studies from India have taken a longitudinal approach in this respect. This study was undertaken to identify such lacunae.

Methods: This was an open label, prospective, observational study. Each treatment naive patient was followed up for a period of 6 months, where their prescriptions were scanned for the type of the anti glaucoma medications, total number of medications, route of administration, their duration of use and their frequency of dosage and change in medications if any, in each visits.

Results: A gradual shift from monotherapy towards combination therapy was observed. Overall averages for prescriptions were topped by monotherapy at 44.25 followed by fixed dose combinations at 38.25, and then combination-polytherapy at 36 and the least number of prescriptions were for concurrent polytherapy at 17.5. Amongst all monotherapy agents, beta blockers were the most frequently prescribed drugs at baseline but their share of prescriptions was almost halved at the end of our study. The prostaglandin analogs on the other hand saw an upsurge in prescriptions from their baseline to the end of this study. Prostaglandin analogs andbeta blockers as fixed dose combination was a popular prescription over the entire study duration.

Conclusions: Prescribing trends were remarkable for the shift from primary monotherapy towards fixed dose combinations as the study concluded. The decline in the number of beta blocker prescriptions and a rise in prostaglandin analog prescriptions is a testament to their better effectiveness and tolerability. The future of open angle glaucoma pharmacotherapy lies in prescribing more efficacious drugs either in monotherapy or in fixed combinations.

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Published

2018-04-23

How to Cite

Maitra, A., Bhattacharyya, S., Mukherjee, S., Era, N., Ghosh, S., & Tripathi, S. K. (2018). Prescribing trends of anti glaucoma medication usage in treatment naive patients of primary open angle glaucoma in a tertiary care hospital in Eastern India. International Journal of Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 7(5), 971–975. https://doi.org/10.18203/2319-2003.ijbcp20181645

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Original Research Articles