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Eye (Lond)March 20252 citations

Diagnostic accuracy of optic nerve OCT and ultrasound in a large paediatric cohort referred with suspected papilloedema and very low rates of raised ICP.

Ambrose Christy, Graham Kirsten, Hamilton Ruth, Houtman Anne Cees


AI Summary

In children with suspected papilledema, OCT and ultrasound showed promising accuracy for detecting rare cases of raised intracranial pressure, highlighting most referrals were unnecessary and could be managed in optometry.

Abstract

Background/objectives: The Honey Rose trial increased referrals for suspected papilloedema. We audited such referrals from community optometrists and used long-term patient outcomes to investigate the diagnostic accuracy of OCT retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness and B scan ultrasound optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) for raised intracranial pressure (rICP).

Subjects/Methods

Audit of 337 children seen in a 'blurry disc' clinic. Long-term outcomes (6-42 months) were used to classify children as with or without raised ICP. Receiver operating curves investigated diagnostic accuracy of RNFL and ONSD cut-off values. Regression modelling investigated potential predictive variables for rICP.

Results

310/337 children (92%) were discharged, 75 of whom were reviewed due to some clinical suspicion. 27/337 children (8%) were referred to other specialists, of whom 18 had rICP (16 IIH, one intra-cranial tumour, one arachnoid cyst). RNFL thickness cut-off >144 µm at 95% specificity had 83% sensitivity (95% CI 61-100%) and ONSD cut-off >4.99 mm at 90% specificity had 82% sensitivity (95% CI 50-100%) for rICP. Increased RNFL thickness, increased ONSD and presence of symptoms all contributed to prediction of rICP: acuity, age, sex and all other OCT parameters did not.

Conclusions

95% (319/337) of children referred with suspected papilloedema did not have raised ICP. Almost three-quarters of children referred (253/337, 70%) would have been more appropriately managed in community optometry. OCT RNFL and ONSD cut-offs show promising diagnostic accuracy for rICP in this study. There is a clear need to support community optometry to resume management of most children with suspected papilloedema.


MeSH Terms

HumansPapilledemaTomography, Optical CoherenceMaleFemaleChildChild, PreschoolUltrasonographyInfantIntracranial HypertensionROC CurveReferral and ConsultationAdolescentSensitivity and SpecificityOptic NerveNerve FibersRetinal Ganglion CellsIntracranial Pressure

Key Concepts5

In a cohort of 337 children referred with suspected papilloedema, 95% (319/337) did not have raised intracranial pressure.

DiagnosisCohortAuditn=337 children

An OCT retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness cut-off of >144 µm demonstrated 83% sensitivity (95% CI 61-100%) at 95% specificity for detecting raised intracranial pressure in a cohort of 337 children referred with suspected papilloedema.

DiagnosisCohortAuditn=337 childrenCh5

A B-scan ultrasound optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) cut-off of >4.99 mm demonstrated 82% sensitivity (95% CI 50-100%) at 90% specificity for detecting raised intracranial pressure in a cohort of 337 children referred with suspected papilloedema.

DiagnosisCohortAuditn=337 childrenCh5

Increased OCT retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness, increased B-scan ultrasound optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD), and the presence of symptoms all contributed to the prediction of raised intracranial pressure in a cohort of 337 children referred with suspected papilloedema.

DiagnosisCohortAuditn=337 childrenCh5

In a cohort of 337 children referred with suspected papilloedema, 70% (253/337) could have been more appropriately managed in community optometry, indicating a need to support community optometry in managing most children with suspected papilloedema.

PrognosisCohortAuditn=337 childrenCh28

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