Longitudinal variability outcomes of frontloaded visual field testing.
Jeremy C K Tan, Jonathan Crowston, Katharina Bell, Michael Kalloniatis, Henrietta Wang, Jack Phu
Summary
Frontloading VF tests on the same visit may help clinicians meet the recommendations of minimum test frequency in glaucoma and can decrease the longitudinal variability of global and pointwise sensitivity changes.
Abstract
AIM
To assess if performing two visual field (VF) tests per eye on the same visit (frontloading) can increase perimetric data and decrease longitudinal variability compared with one test per eye.
METHODS
A prospective longitudinal study of 498 healthy, glaucoma suspects and glaucomatous eyes of 333 subjects. Two intra-visit SITA-Faster VF tests (T1 and T2) per eye were performed on each visit for five consecutive visits. Rates of change and longitudinal variability of global (mean deviation) and pointwise sensitivity were compared between two approaches using linear mixed-effects models: use of the mean of T1 and T2 sensitivity values (frontloaded approach) versus the use of T1 sensitivity values alone (non-frontloaded approach).
RESULTS
The mean duration of follow-up was 2.0 (SD 0.5) years. The mean rate of global sensitivity progression was similar in both frontloaded and non-frontloaded approaches (-0.12 vs -0.07 dB/year, respectively, p=0.3). The residual SD (1.19 vs 1.36, p15%) were excluded.
CONCLUSION
Frontloading VF tests on the same visit may help clinicians meet the recommendations of minimum test frequency in glaucoma and can decrease the longitudinal variability of global and pointwise sensitivity changes.
Keywords
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Discussion
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