Purpose: To investigate longitudinal retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness change in patients with normal-pressure glaucoma (NPG)
and to assess how this may be related to visual fields.
Methods: NPG patients and normal subjects who had had serial GDx nerve fibre layer Analyzer II imaging and Humphrey visual fields
performed at least 18 months apart were selected for study. These measurements were compared between groups at baseline and
at subsequent follow-up, for change over time.
Results: Seventy-five NPG patients and 35 normal subjects were studied. Significant differences in RNFL thickness were found between
NPG patients and normal controls at baseline (
P≤0.001). Over the same time, there was greater RNFL thinning in NPG patients than in normal subjects (
P≤0.0001). RNFL thinning in NPG was negatively correlated with visual field log MD at baseline (
P<0.001) and change in MD over time (
P<0.001).
Conclusion: Reduction of RNFL thickness over time was significantly greater in NPG patients than in normal subjects, indicating that
NPG patients’ RNFL had thinned at a faster rate. NPG patients with initially better visual fields had a greater reduction
in RNFL thickness than did those with initially more advanced visual field defects, suggesting that more RNFL change may be
observed when glaucoma is at an earlier stage. There was a direct relationship between RNFL thinning and visual field deterioration.
Received: 15 February 2000 Revised: 27 June 2000 Accepted: 3 July 2000