Abstract

PurposeTo determine feasibility of optic nerve head (ONH) imaging and to characterize ONH development in full-term infants without sedation using handheld spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD OCT).DesignProspective cross-sectional study.ParticipantsThree hundred fifty-two children aged between 1 day and 13 years.MethodsAll participants were imaged using handheld SD OCT without sedation during a single scan session. The percentage of successful scans was calculated. Interexaminer reproducibility and differences between right and left eyes were assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). Images were analyzed using ImageJ software. The developmental trajectories over time for ONH parameters were calculated using fractional polynomial modelling.Main Outcome MeasuresDisc and cup diameter (expressed as distance in micrometers and visual angle in degrees), cup depth, Bruch's membrane opening–minimum rim width (BMO-MRW), retinal thickness, and retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL; 1700 μm and 6° from the disc center).ResultsOn average, 70% of participants were imaged successfully. Interexaminer reliability was excellent (ICC, >0.89) for diametric and retinal thickness parameters. Right and left eyes were similar for diametric measurements (ICC, >0.79), but more variable for nasal BMO-MRW, RNFL, and retinal thickness. The mean disc and cup diameter increase by 30% and 40%, respectively, between birth and 13 years of age when expressed as a distance measure, but remained constant (at 5°–5.5° and 2°, respectively) when expressed as a visual angle with reference to the eye nodal point. The peripapillary temporal RNFL demonstrated a marked initial decrease of nearly 35% between birth and approximately 18 months of age. This was followed by a slow increase up to 12 years of age when measured at 1700 μm from the disc center, although there was little change when measured at 6° from the disc center.ConclusionsWe demonstrated feasibility of handheld SD OCT imaging of the ONH in full-term infants and children without anaesthesia or sedation. This is the first in vivo handheld SD OCT study to describe the development of ONH parameters during the critical early years of visual maturation. Our results provide a normative database for use in routine practice and further studies of ONH pathologic features.

Highlights

  • To determine feasibility of optic nerve head (ONH) imaging and to characterize ONH development in full-term infants without sedation using handheld spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD Optical coherence tomography (OCT))

  • Right and left eyes were similar for diametric measurements (ICC, >0.79), but more variable for nasal Bruch’s membrane openingeminimum rim width (BMO-MRW), retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL), and retinal thickness

  • We demonstrated feasibility of handheld spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD OCT) imaging of the ONH in full-term infants and children without anaesthesia or sedation

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of the current study was to create a clinically useful pathway for using the handheld SD OCT to assess ONH morphologic features of children in vivo. Our aims were (1) to test the feasibility of handheld SD OCT for imaging the ONH in full-term children without sedation, (2) to estimate interexaminer reliability and intereye similarity of ONH measures in children, (3) to describe ONH development between birth and 13 years of age, and (4) to provide normative estimates with 95% confidence intervals for 13 age bands between birth and 13 years of age for ONH parameters that can be measured in a clinical setting for future studies of ocular development in children

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