Clinicians' Use of Quantitative Information while Assessing the Rate of Functional Progression in Glaucoma.
Stuart K Gardiner, Robert M Kinast, Moraes Carlos Gustavo De, Donald L Budenz, Jin Wook Jeoung, John T Lind, Jonathan S Myers, Kouros Nouri-Mahdavi, Lindsay A Rhodes, Nicholas G Strouthidis, Teresa C Chen, Steven L Mansberger
Summary
Expert academic glaucoma specialists' assessment of the rate of change correlated best with VFI rates, except in eyes with a VFI near the ceiling of 100%.
Abstract
PURPOSE
Clinicians use both global and point-wise information from visual fields to assess the rate of glaucomatous functional progression. We asked which objective, quantitative measures best correlated with subjective assessment by glaucoma experts. In particular, we aimed to determine how much that judgment was based on localized rates of change vs. on global indices reported by the perimeter.
DESIGN
Prospective cohort study.
PARTICIPANTS
Eleven academic, expert glaucoma specialists independently scored the rate of functional progression, from 1 (improvement) to 7 (very rapid progression), for a series of 5 biannual clinical printouts from 100 glaucoma or glaucoma suspect eyes of 51 participants, 20 of which were scored twice to assess repeatability.
METHODS
Regression models were used to predict the average of the 11 clinicians' scores based on objective rates of change of mean deviation (MD), visual field index (VFI), pattern standard deviation (PSD), the Nth fastest progressing location, and the Nth fastest progressing of 10 anatomically defined clusters of locations after weighting by eccentricity.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Correlation between the objective rates of change and the average of the 11 clinicians' scores.
RESULTS
The average MD of the study eyes was -2.4 dB (range, -16.8 to +2.8 dB). The mean clinician score was highly repeatable, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.95. It correlated better with the rate of change of VFI (pseudo-R = 0.73, 95% confidence interval [CI, 0.60-0.83]) than with MD (pseudo-R = 0.63, 95% CI [0.45-0.76]) or PSD (pseudo-R = 0.41, 95% CI [0.26-0.55]). Using point-wise information, the highest correlations were found with the fifth-fastest progressing location (pseudo-R = 0.71, 95% CI [0.56-0.80]) and the fastest-progressing cluster after eccentricity weighting (pseudo-R = 0.61, 95% CI [0.48-0.72]). Among 25 eyes with an average VFI of > 99%, the highest observed pseudo-Rvalue was 0.34 (95% CI [0.16-0.61]) for PSD.
CONCLUSIONS
Expert academic glaucoma specialists' assessment of the rate of change correlated best with VFI rates, except in eyes with a VFI near the ceiling of 100%. Sensitivities averaged within clusters of locations have been shown to detect change sooner, but the experts' opinions correlated more closely with global VFI. This could be because it is currently the only index for which the perimeter automatically provides a quantitative estimate of the rate of functional progression.
Keywords
More by Stuart K Gardiner
View full profile →Automated Segmentation Errors When Using Optical Coherence Tomography to Measure Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Thickness in Glaucoma.
The connective tissue phenotype of glaucomatous cupping in the monkey eye - Clinical and research implications.
Factors Influencing Central Lamina Cribrosa Depth: A Multicenter Study.
Top Research in Disease Progression
Browse all →Estimating Optical Coherence Tomography Structural Measurement Floors to Improve Detection of Progression in Advanced Glaucoma.
Progressive Macula Vessel Density Loss in Primary Open-Angle Glaucoma: A Longitudinal Study.
Detecting Structural Progression in Glaucoma with Optical Coherence Tomography.
In the Knowledge Library
Discussion
Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.