AI Article Synopsis

  • Corneal pachymetry is critical for safe refractive surgery, particularly for patients with keratoconus, and this study evaluates the reliability of central corneal thickness (CCT) measurements using two different devices: optical low-coherence reflectometry (OLCR) and ultrasonic pachymeter (US).
  • The study involved 30 eyes from young subjects, where measurements were taken three times with both devices to analyze consistency and agreement between the two methods.
  • Results showed that OLCR demonstrated high reliability and comparable measurements to US, suggesting they can be used interchangeably with slight adjustments.

Article Abstract

Background: Corneal pachymetry is widely used for refractive surgery and follow up in keratoconus, accurate measurement is essential for a safe surgery.

Objective: To assess intraobserver reliability of central corneal thickness (CCT) measurements using optical low-coherence reflectometry (OLCR) technology and its agreement with ultrasonic pachymeter (US).

Method: Randomized and prospective comparative evaluation of diagnostic technology. One randomly healthy eye of subjects was scanned three times with both devices. Intraobserver within-subject standard deviation (Sw), coefficient of variation (CVw) and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) were obtained for reliability analysis; for study agreement, data were analyzed using the paired-sample t test and the Bland-Altman LoA method. The mean of three scans of each equipment was used to assess the LoA.

Results: The study enrolled 30 eyes of 30 subjects with average age of 28.70 ± 8.06 years. For repeatability, the Sw were 3.41 and 5.96 µ, the intraobserver CVw was 2 and 4% and ICC 0.991 and 0.988, for OLCR and US respectively. The mean CCT difference between OLCR and US was 8.90 ± 9.03 µ (95% confidence interval: 5.52-2.27 µ), and the LoA was 35.40 µ.

Conclusions: OLCR technology provided reliable intraobserver CCT measurements. Both pachymetry measurements may be used interchangeably with minimum calibration adjustment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.24875/CIRU.M18000002DOI Listing

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