Ganglion Cell Complex: The Optimal Measure for Detection of Structural Progression in the Macula.
Vahid Mohammadzadeh, Erica Su, Alessandro Rabiolo, Lynn Shi, Sepideh Heydar Zadeh, Simon K Law, Anne L Coleman, Joseph Caprioli, Robert E Weiss, Kouros Nouri-Mahdavi
Summary
GCC is the optimal macular measure for detection of structural change in eyes with moderate to severe glaucoma.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To test the hypothesis that macular ganglion cell complex (GCC) thickness from optical coherence tomography (OCT) provides a stronger change signal regardless of glaucoma severity compared with other macular measures.
DESIGN
Prospective cohort study.
METHODS
Eyes were from 112 patients with moderate to severe glaucoma at baseline from a tertiary glaucoma center. In each 3° × 3° macular superpixel, a hierarchical Bayesian random intercept and slope model with random residual variance was fit to longitudinal full macular thickness (FMT), outer retina layers, GCC, ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer (GCIPL), and ganglion cell layer (GCL) measurements. We estimated population- and individual-level slopes and intercepts. Proportions of substantial worsening and improving superpixel slopes were compared between layers and in superpixels with mild to moderate vs severe damage (total deviation of corresponding visual field location ≥ -8 vs < -8 dB).
RESULTS
Mean (SD) follow-up time and baseline 10-2 visual field mean deviation were 3.6 (0.4) years and -8.9 (5.9) dB, respectively. FMT displayed the highest proportion of significant negative slopes (1932/3519 [54.9%]), followed by GCC (1286/3519 [36.5%]), outer retina layers (1254/3519 [35.6%]), (GCIPL) (1075/3518 [30.6%]), and (GCL) (698/3518 [19.8%]). Inner macular measures detected less worsening in the severe glaucoma group; yet GCC (223/985 [22.6%]) identified the highest proportion (GCIPL: 183/985 [18.6%];
GCL
106/985 [10.8%]). Proportions of positive rates were small and comparable among all measures.
CONCLUSIONS
GCC is the optimal macular measure for detection of structural change in eyes with moderate to severe glaucoma. Although a higher proportion of worsening superpixels was observed for FMT, a large portion of FMT change could be attributed to changes in outer retina layers.
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