Abstract
To compare the reliability of the whorl-like region with that of the central cornea for accurate assessment of corneal subbasal nerve plexus (SNP) by analyzing the parameter variability of these two anatomical regions in repeated measurements. Participants were scanned in the central cornea and whorl-like region with in vivo confocal microscopy on three occasions by two examiners within a time span of one week. Coefficients of repeatability (CoR), intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC), and Bland-Altman scatter plots with 95% limits of agreement (LOA) in the central cornea and whorl-like region were calculated, respectively, based on the nerve fiber length, then the inter-observer and intra-observer agreement were compared between these two anatomical regions. The inter-observer ICC was 0.945, the inter-observer CoR was 0.052, the intra-observer ICC was 0.936, and the inter-observer CoR was 0.046, with narrow 95% LOA within 1 standard deviation in the whorl-like region, whereas the inter-observer ICC was 0.600, the inter-observer CoR was 0.207, the intra-observer ICC was 0.206, and the intra-observer CoR was 0.253, with 95% LOA nearly threefold wider than the standard deviation in the central cornea. Nerve parameter in the whorl-like region showed higher inter-observer and intra-observer agreement than that of the central cornea. The whorl-like region is a more reliable site for accurate assessment of SNP.
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