Relationship Between Contact Lens Sensor Output Parameters and Visual Field Progression in Open-angle Glaucoma: Assessment of a Practical Tool to Guide Clinical Risk-assessment.
Kevin Gillmann, Cara C Young, Jordan Stanley, Leonard K Seibold, Kirsten Hoskens, Neha Midha, Malik Y Kahook, Kaweh Mansouri
Summary
PR provided comparable predictions of the risk of fast VF progression as did physician estimates based on all available clinical data.
Abstract
PURPOSE
In recent years, new technologies have emerged to better analyze and interpret intraocular pressure (IOP) fluctuations. Among them is the progression report (PR), an algorithm based on continuous contact lens sensor (CLS) readings to estimate the likelihood of fast visual field (VF) glaucomatous progression. The objective of this study is to validate the PR.
METHODS
In this retrospective study, 30 open-angle glaucoma patients were enrolled. Twenty-four hours IOP-related variations were recorded using a CLS. Recordings were used to generate PR. The likelihood of fast VF progression (<-1 dB/y mean deviation) was estimated by 2 masked assessors based on clinical parameters. At least 3 VF were performed over the 2 years following the initial assessment, to determine actual progression.
RESULTS
Mean age was 65.9±10.45 years, with a mean baseline mean deviation of -5.4±5.1. After a mean follow-up of 29.5±12.9 months, 26.7% of eyes were assessed as fast progressors (-2.9±1.9 dBs/y). The average risk-score attributed by the PR was 42% [41% (slow) vs. 44% (fast); P=0.035]. Correlations between the 2 assessors were good (r=0.59), and identical to that between PR and the averaged assessors' gradings. Correlations between mean deviation progression rates and PR, Assessor 1 and Assessor 2's gradings were, r=0.57, 0.31, and 0.43, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
PR provided comparable predictions of the risk of fast VF progression as did physician estimates based on all available clinical data. With their relationship to the eye's biomechanical properties and the ocular tissues' response to pressure variations, CLS recordings may offer new information that complements conventional examinations.
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Discussion
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