Abstract

PurposeTo compare methods to assess visual field (VF) progression in glaucoma.Methods4,950 VFs of 253 primary open angle-glaucoma patients were evaluated for progression with the following methods: clinical evaluation, guided progression analysis (GPA), mean deviation (MD), and visual field index (VFI) rates, Advanced Glaucoma Intervention Study (AGIS) and Collaborative Initial Glaucoma Treatment Study (CIGTS) scores, pointwise linear regression (PLR), permutation of PLR (PoPLR), and glaucoma rate index (GRI). A separate simulated series of longitudinal VFs was assessed with all methods except for GPA and clinical evaluation.ResultsThe average (±SD) age of the patients at baseline was 65.4 (±11.5) years. The average (±SD) follow-up was 11.8 (±4.6) years, and the mean (±SD) number of VFs was 16.8 (±7.0). Proportion of series detected as progressing was 65% for PoPLR, 58% for GRI, 41% for GPA, 40% for PLR, 36% for CIGTS, 35% for clinicians, 31% for MD rate, 29% for AGIS, and 22% for VFI rate. Median times to detection of progression were 7.3 years for PoPLR, 7.5 years for GRI, 11 years for clinicians, 14 years for GPA, 16 years for PLR, 17 years for CIGTS, 19 years for AGIS, and more than 20 years for MD and VFI rates. In simulated VF series, GRI had the highest partial area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (0.040) to distinguish between glaucoma progression and aging/cataract decay, followed by VFI rate (0.028), MD rate (0.024), and PoPLR (0.006).ConclusionsGRI and PoPLR showed the highest proportion of series detected as progressing and shortest times to progression detection. GRI exhibited the best ability to detect progression in the simulated VF series.Translational RelevanceKnowledge of the properties of every method would allow tailoring application in both clinical and research settings.

Highlights

  • Glaucoma is a progressive optic neuropathy characterized by characteristic alterations of the optic nerve head, retinal nerve fiber layer, and visual field (VF)

  • Standard achromatic perimetry is the gold standard for VF assessment, which remains a fundamental test for the diagnosis and care of glaucoma patients

  • All VF series were assessed for progression with the following methods: qualitative clinical evaluation, guided progression analysis (GPA), MD rates of change, VFI rates of change the Advanced Glaucoma Interventional Study (AGIS) scoring system, the Collaborative Initial Glaucoma Treatment Study (CIGTS) scoring system, pointwise linear regression (PLR), permutation of pointwise linear regression (PoPLR), and glaucoma rate index (GRI)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Glaucoma is a progressive optic neuropathy characterized by characteristic alterations of the optic nerve head, retinal nerve fiber layer, and visual field (VF). Standard achromatic perimetry is the gold standard for VF assessment, which remains a fundamental test for the diagnosis and care of glaucoma patients. Recognition of longitudinal VF changes allows the timely application of therapeutic measures to preserve visual function and prevent visual disability.. Determination of the rates of progression is important to discriminate fast from slow progressors, because the former group of patients may require more aggressive treatment and more frequent follow-up. Most clinical trials have defined perimetric deterioration as their primary study outcome.. TVST j 2019 j Vol 8 j No 5 j Article 2

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call