Abstract

Background: The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has an existing teleretinal screening program that uses nonmydriatic fundus photography to screen for diabetic retinopathy in primary care clinics. Concurrently, optical coherence tomography (OCT) has become a routine screening modality in eye clinics for the diagnosis and management of retinal diseases. Introduction: This study aimed to evaluate the first year of a pilot tele-OCT program that used existing resources within the VHA. Without the tele-OCT program, all patients would have been referred to retina clinic for an in-person evaluation. Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective chart review study of patients evaluated by a retina specialist through asynchronous tele-OCT evaluation in 2019. Electronic medical records were used to assess patients' demographic and clinical characteristics, tele-OCT consult results, and patient adherence to tele-OCT follow-up plans. Results: There were 158 tele-OCT consults originating from optometry and nonretinal ophthalmology clinics in 2019. After tele-OCT evaluation, 113 (71.5%) patients were recommended to be monitored in their originating eye clinic, 27 (17.1%) were referred to intravitreal injection clinic, and 12 (7.6%) were referred to retina clinic for in-person evaluation. Patient adherence to tele-OCT follow-up plans was 76.4%. Patients with decreased central vision (p = 0.007) and patients referred to intravitreal injection clinic (p = 0.043) were most adherent to follow-up. Discussion: The tele-OCT program reduced unnecessary in-person clinic visits and enabled more retina clinic availability. Follow-up adherence was greatest among symptomatic patients and those requiring treatment. Conclusions: Tele-OCT can extend tertiary care resources and improve patient care in a large multidisciplinary eye care practice.

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