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Acta OphthalmolOctober 20180 citations

Predicting the outcome of laser peripheral iridotomy for primary angle closure suspect eyes using anterior segment optical coherence tomography.

Koh Victor, Keshtkaran Mohammad Reza, Hernstadt David, Aquino Maria Cecilia D, Chew Paul T, Sng Chelvin


AI Summary

An algorithm using pre-LPI ASOCT measurements (iris concavity, angle recess area) predicted LPI success in PACS eyes with 79% accuracy, outperforming ophthalmologists. This aids LPI decision-making for PACS prophylaxis.

Abstract

Purpose

Develop an algorithm to predict the success of laser peripheral iridotomy (LPI) in primary angle closure suspect (PACS), using pretreatment anterior segment optical coherence tomography (ASOCT) scans.

Methods

A total of 69 eyes with PACS underwent LPI and time-domain ASOCT scans (temporal and nasal cuts) were performed before and after LPI. After LPI, success is defined as one or more angles changed from closed to open. All the pretreatment ASOCT scans were analysed using the Anterior Segment Analysis Program to derive anterior chamber angle (ACA) measurements. The measurements for each angle were ordered along with angle-independent measurements totalling to 42 measurements which serve as features for the prediction algorithm. Two masked glaucoma fellowship-trained ophthalmologists graded the pre-LPI ASOCT scans to determine whether LPI was likely to successful.

Results

There were 42 (60.9%) eyes that fulfilled the criteria for success after LPI. Iris concavity, angle recess area (750 μm) and iris concavity ratio showed the highest predictive score and were selected using correlation-based subset selection method. These features were classified into two ('successful' and 'unsuccessful') categories using a Bayes classifier. The algorithm predicted the success of LPI with 79.28% cross validation accuracy, which was superior to the predictive accuracy of the ophthalmologists (kappa 0.497 and 0.636 respectively).

Conclusion

Using pretreatment ASOCT scans, our algorithm was superior to ophthalmologists in predicting the success of LPI for PACS eyes. This novel algorithm could aid decision making in offering LPI as a prophylaxis for PACS.


MeSH Terms

AlgorithmsAnterior Eye SegmentFemaleFollow-Up StudiesGlaucoma, Angle-ClosureGonioscopyHumansIntraocular PressureIridectomyLaser TherapyLasers, Solid-StateMaleMiddle AgedProspective StudiesTomography, Optical Coherence

Key Concepts4

An algorithm developed using pretreatment anterior segment optical coherence tomography (ASOCT) scans predicted the success of laser peripheral iridotomy (LPI) in primary angle closure suspect (PACS) eyes with 79.28% cross-validation accuracy.

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=69 eyes with PACSCh3Ch4Ch38

The algorithm's predictive accuracy (79.28%) for LPI success in PACS eyes was superior to that of two masked glaucoma fellowship-trained ophthalmologists (kappa 0.497 and 0.636 respectively).

Comparative EffectivenessCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=69 eyes with PACSCh3Ch4Ch38

Iris concavity, angle recess area (750 μm), and iris concavity ratio were the features with the highest predictive scores for LPI success in PACS eyes, selected using a correlation-based subset selection method.

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=69 eyes with PACSCh3Ch4Ch38

In a study of 69 eyes with primary angle closure suspect (PACS) that underwent LPI, 42 eyes (60.9%) fulfilled the criteria for success after LPI, defined as one or more angles changing from closed to open.

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=69 eyes with PACSCh13Ch38

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