Eye Dynamics and Engineering Network Consortium: Baseline Characteristics of a Randomized Trial in Healthy Adults.
David M Reed, Carol B Toris, Jesse Gilbert, Matthew Trese, Tyler J Kristoff, Shan Fan, Donna Neely, Simone Ferguson, Arash Kazemi, Jay W McLaren, Vikas Gulati, David C Musch, Arthur J Sit, Sayoko E Moroi
Summary
The current study from the EDEN Consortium describes measurement methods and data analyses with emphasis on IOP variability.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To improve understanding of intraocular pressure (IOP) and its variance, this project identifies systemic and ocular characteristics of healthy eyes of adult volunteers including IOP variation, ocular biometrics, and aqueous humor dynamics (AHDs). These data serve as baseline controls for further studies from the Eye Dynamics and Engineering Network (EDEN) Consortium.
DESIGN
Multicenter open-label clinical trial in healthy adults randomized to 1 week treatment with 2 approved glaucoma drugs in a crossover design.
PARTICIPANTS
Among 135 healthy participants, 122 participants (aged 55.2 ± 8.8 years; 92 females, 30 males) completed the protocol.
METHODS
Participants from the University of Michigan, Mayo Clinic, and University of Nebraska Medical Center underwent measurements of ocular biometrics, AHD, and IOP using 4 tonometers. Intraocular pressure data during 3 study visits without glaucoma medications were used in the analysis. The PhenX Toolkit survey acquired standardized data on medical history, surgical history, medications, smoking and alcohol exposures, and physical measures.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
The variability of IOP measurements within eyes was assessed as visit-to-visit IOP variation, within-visit IOP variation, and within-visit positional IOP variation. The concordance (or correlation) between eyes was also assessed.
RESULTS
Average positional change of > 4.7 mmHg was detected with a range of 0.5-11.0 mmHg. Pearson correlation of IOP between eyes within a visit was 0.87 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.82-0.91) for Goldmann applanation tonometry, 0.91 (95% CI, 0.88-0.94) for Icare rebound tonometry, and 0.91 (95% CI, 0.88-0.94) for pneumatonometry. There was a 4% to 12% asymmetric fluctuation of 3 mmHg or more between eyes between visits using rebound tonometry, 9% with Goldmann applanation tonometry, and 3% to 4% by pneumotonometry. The coefficient of variation between visits for the same eye ranged from 11.2% to 12.9% for pneumatonometry, from 13.6% to 17.4% for rebound tonometry, and 15.8% to 16.2% for Goldmann applanation tonometry.
CONCLUSIONS
The current study from the EDEN Consortium describes measurement methods and data analyses with emphasis on IOP variability. Future papers will focus on changes in ocular biometrics and AHD with timolol or latanoprost treatment. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE(S): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found after the references.
Keywords
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Discussion
Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.