Remote Screening for Optic Nerve Cupping Using Smartphone-based Nonmydriatic Fundus Photography

Précis: Evaluation of nonmydriatic fundus photographs captured with a low-cost, smartphone-based camera facilitated remote screening of patients for enlarged optic nerve cup-to-disc ratio in the Independent Nation of Samoa, an underserved setting with one full-time ophthalmologist in the entire country. Purpose: To investigate factors that impact inter-rater agreement of glaucoma suspect optic disc status using a low-cost, handheld nonmydriatic fundus camera. Methods: Color fundus photographs were obtained using the PanOptic iExaminer attached to an iPhone 6S by a lay examiner on 206 participants in the Independent Nation of Samoa. Images were remotely graded by an ophthalmologist and optometrist, and images from participants identified as at-risk for glaucoma were escalated to a glaucoma subspecialist for review. Fundus photo brightness, contrast, and focus were measured using the cup, rim, and temporal regions of the disc. Stereoscopic image pairs were subsequently generated from a subset of individual nonmydriatic photographs. Results: Features suggestive of glaucoma based on optic disc cupping were identified in 16.0% (33/206) of participants. There was moderately strong agreement between graders (90.3%) with κ=0.53 [95% confidence interval (CI)=0.33-0.73]. The intraclass correlation coefficients for the cup-to-disc ratio (CDR) and its difference were 0.84 (95% CI=0.81-0.87) and 0.68 (95% CI=0.59-0.75). Of the 33 participants identified, 94% ha...
Source: Journal of Glaucoma - Category: Opthalmology Tags: Original Studies Source Type: research