Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite advances in glaucoma management, topical eyedrop treatment has been paramount, with prostaglandin analogues (PGAs) being first-line agents. While late presentation is linked with deprivation, there is no recent research examining associations between deprivation and prescribing within primary care. AIM: To explore PGA prescribing in general practice over a 6-year timeline, assessing associations with deprivation. DESIGN & SETTING: Analysis of NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA) data for general practice prescribing in England from April 2016-March 2022. METHOD: Glaucoma treatments by GP prescribers were extracted, identifying ~9.11-9.58 million prescriptions/annum. Data were linked to Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) quintiles of GP practices. Crude rates per 1000 population were calculated using population data from NHS Digital. Time-series analyses facilitated comparison in prescribing nationally and in deprived areas. Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) modelling facilitated measurement of synchrony between time series using cross correlation. RESULTS: PGAs and fixed combination eyedrops accounted for approximately two-thirds of glaucoma-related prescribing. Prescriptions per month increased slightly over a 6-year timeline, but rates per 1000 population reduced in 2020-2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of PGA prescriptions dispensed in deprived areas was lower than all other quintiles. Cross-correlation analysis indicates a lag of ~12 months between average PGA prescribing nationally versus more deprived areas. CONCLUSION: The rate of PGA prescribing in primary care was substantially lower in deprived versus affluent areas, with delayed uptake of PGAs in more deprived areas of ~12 months. Further research is needed to explore reasons for this discrepancy, permitting strategies to be developed to reduce unwarranted variation.