New Glaucoma Treatments in 2026: What Patients Should Know About Longer-Lasting Eye Pressure Control episode artwork

EPISODE · May 2, 2026 · 18 MIN

New Glaucoma Treatments in 2026: What Patients Should Know About Longer-Lasting Eye Pressure Control

from Glaucoma, Vision & Longevity: Supplements & Science · host Visual Field Test

This audio article is from VisualFieldTest.com.Read the full article here: https://visualfieldtest.com/en/new-glaucoma-treatments-in-2026-what-patients-should-know-about-longer-lasting-eye-pressure-controlTest your visual field online: https://visualfieldtest.comSupport the show so new episodes keep coming: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563091/supportExcerpt:New Glaucoma Treatments for 2026: Longer-Lasting Pressure Control Glaucoma, a leading cause of vision loss, is driven by high intraocular pressure (IOP) in the eye. Daily eye drops are the main treatment, but many patients find them hard to use consistently. Drops can sting, cause redness, or simply be forgotten in the busy routines of life () (). Missing doses can let eye pressure creep up, risking vision loss. Sustained-release glaucoma treatments aim to solve this by steadily delivering medication without daily drops. Instead of an eyedrop bottle, a doctor places a tiny implant or device that continuously releases glaucoma medicine for months. These approaches remove the need to remember daily drops and help keep pressure controlled around the clock () (). Below we explain how these new treatments work, who might benefit, and how they compare to traditional drops. We focus on the options most talked about for 2026, separating those already FDA-approved from those still being studied. How Sustained-Release Treatments Work Traditional glaucoma drops deliver medication onto the eye surface, but much of it washes away before it can work. Sustained-release devices sit inside the eye or on eye tissue and let out drug slowly over time. For example, Durysta is a tiny biodegradable rod (about 1.1 mm long) that an eye doctor injects into the anterior chamber (the front part of the eye) (). It contains 10 micrograms of bimatoprost (the medicine in Lumigan drops) embedded in a dissolving polymer. Once placed, Durysta releases bimatoprost steadily for about 4–6 months () (). The implant then dissolves on its own, so no second procedure is needed. Another approach, used by iDose TR, is a tiny titanium implant anchored into the eye wall. This anchoring device contains a reservoir of travoprost (another prostaglandin drug). About 75 micrograms of travoprost continuously elutes (seeps out) into the eye through a controlled membrane (). The iDose TR device stays in place for up to 2–3 years, delivering medication 24/7. (As of early 2026, the FDA has even approved re-administering iDose TR when the first dose runs out () ().) Both Durysta and iDose TR release prostaglandin-type drugs that help fluid drain out of the eye, lowering pressure. Similarly, experimental implants like OTX-TIC (Paxtrava), PA5108, and ENV515 are designed as tiny biodegradable implants or particles that doctors insert into the eye. They work the same way: a drug (e.g. travoprost or latanoprost) is slowly released over months () (). Punctal plugs, by contrast, sit in the tear drainage ducts (near the nose) and gently release medication into the tears () (). Each system steadily bathes the eye in medicine, nearly eliminating the peaks and troughs of pressure seen with once-daily drops. Who might benefit? These devices are best for people with open-angle glaucoma or ocular hypertension who need regular IOP control but struggle with daily drops. Older patients, those with limited mobility or trouble handling eye drops, or anyone who miss doses are prime candidates () (). Because the drugs are in continuous contact with the eye, these devices often work as well as or better than drops while leaving the patient with fewer steps in daily routine. FDA-Approved Drop-Free Options Durysta (bimSupport the show

This audio article is from VisualFieldTest.com. Read the full article here: https://visualfieldtest.com/en/new-glaucoma-treatments-in-2026-what-patients-should-know-about-longer-lasting-eye-pressure-control Test your visual field online: https://visualfieldtest.com Support the show so new episodes keep coming: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2563091/support Excerpt: New Glaucoma Treatments for 2026: Longer-Lasting Pressure Control Glaucoma, a leading cause of vision loss, is driven by high intraoc...

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New Glaucoma Treatments in 2026: What Patients Should Know About Longer-Lasting Eye Pressure Control

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This episode was published on May 2, 2026.

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This audio article is from VisualFieldTest.com.Read the full article here: https://visualfieldtest.com/en/new-glaucoma-treatments-in-2026-what-patients-should-know-about-longer-lasting-eye-pressure-controlTest your visual field online:...

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