Distinguishing Glaucoma, Cataract, and Glaucoma Suspect Based on Visual Symptoms.
Michael Quintero, Aleksandra Mihailovic, Shameema Sikder, Albert S Jun, Yassine Daoud, Pradeep Y Ramulu
Summary
Visual symptoms distinguish disease state to a moderate degree in glaucoma, cataract, and glaucoma suspect patients.
Abstract
PRCIS
Cataract, glaucoma, and glaucoma suspect patients report differing visual symptoms. Asking patients about their visual symptoms may provide useful diagnostic information and inform decision-making in patients with comorbid conditions.
PURPOSE
To compare visual symptoms in glaucoma, glaucoma suspect (controls), and cataract patients.
METHODS
Glaucoma, cataract, and glaucoma suspect patients at Wilmer Eye Institute responded to a questionnaire rating the frequency and severity of 28 symptoms. Univariate and multivariable logistic regression determined the symptoms that best differentiate each disease pair.
RESULTS
In all, 257 patients (mean age: 67.4 ± 13.4 y; 57.2% female; 41.2% employed), including 79 glaucoma, 84 cataract, and 94 glaucoma suspect patients, participated. Compared with glaucoma suspects, glaucoma patients were more likely to report poor peripheral vision (OR 11.29, 95%
CI
3.73-34.16), better vision in 1 eye (OR 5.48, 95%
CI
1.33-22.64), and light sensitivity (OR 4.85, 95%
CI
1.78-13.24), explaining 40% of the variance in diagnosis (ie, glaucoma vs. glaucoma suspect). Compared with controls, cataract patients were more likely to report light sensitivity (OR 3.33, 95%
CI
1.56-7.10) and worsening vision (OR 12.20, 95%
CI
5.33-27.89), explaining 26% of the variance in diagnosis (ie, cataract vs. glaucoma suspect). Compared with cataract patients, glaucoma patients were more likely to report poor peripheral vision (OR 7.24, 95%
CI
2.53-20.72) and missing patches (OR 4.91, 95%
CI
1.52-15.84), but less likely to report worsening vision (OR 0.08, 95% CI 0.03-0.22), explaining 33% of the variance in diagnosis (ie, glaucoma vs. cataract).
CONCLUSIONS
Visual symptoms distinguish disease state to a moderate degree in glaucoma, cataract, and glaucoma suspect patients. Asking about visual symptoms may serve as a useful diagnostic adjunct and inform decision-making, for example, in glaucoma patients considering cataract surgery.
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