Glaucoma Home Monitoring Using a Tablet-Based Visual Field Test (Eyecatcher): An Assessment of Accuracy and Adherence Over 6 Months.
Pete R Jones, Peter Campbell, Tamsin Callaghan, Lee Jones, Daniel S Asfaw, David F Edgar, David P Crabb
Summary
Home monitoring of VFs is viable for some patients and may provide clinically useful data.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To assess accuracy and adherence of visual field (VF) home monitoring in a pilot sample of patients with glaucoma.
DESIGN
Prospective longitudinal feasibility and reliability study.
METHODS
Twenty adults (median 71 years) with an established diagnosis of glaucoma were issued a tablet perimeter (Eyecatcher) and were asked to perform 1 VF home assessment per eye, per month, for 6 months (12 tests total). Before and after home monitoring, 2 VF assessments were performed in clinic using standard automated perimetry (4 tests total, per eye).
RESULTS
All 20 participants could perform monthly home monitoring, though 1 participant stopped after 4 months (adherence: 98% of tests). There was good concordance between VFs measured at home and in the clinic (r = 0.94, P < .001). In 21 of 236 tests (9%), mean deviation deviated by more than ±3 dB from the median. Many of these anomalous tests could be identified by applying machine learning techniques to recordings from the tablets' front-facing camera (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve = 0.78). Adding home-monitoring data to 2 standard automated perimetry tests made 6 months apart reduced measurement error (between-test measurement variability) in 97% of eyes, with mean absolute error more than halving in 90% of eyes. Median test duration was 4.5 minutes (quartiles: 3.9-5.2 minutes). Substantial variations in ambient illumination had no observable effect on VF measurements (r = 0.07, P = .320).
CONCLUSIONS
Home monitoring of VFs is viable for some patients and may provide clinically useful data.
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