Imaging-Based Detection of Anterior Chamber Inflammation: A Comparative Diagnostic Accuracy Study.

Am J Ophthalmol

From the Population, Policy and Practice Programme, UCL GOS Institute of Child Health (P.U., J.S.R., A.L.S.); Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust (N.T., J.S.R., A.L.S.); National Institute for Health Research Great Ormond Street Biomedical Research Centre (J.S.R., A.L.S.); Ulverscroft Vision Research Group (J.S.R., A.L.S.), London. Electronic address:

Published: July 2024

Purpose: We investigated the impact of operator parameters on the diagnostic performance of anterior-segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) in anterior uveitis.

Design: Prospective comparative diagnostic analysis.

Methods: Setting: Single site.

Study Population: Children younger than 18 years with anterior uveitis, recruited consecutively.

Observation Procedures: Index testing: Optovue RTVue80 AS-OCT using "low-volume" (LV, horizontal and vertical cross-sections) and "high-volume" (HV, 68 horizontal cross-sections) protocols. Reference testing: slitlamp examination with anterior chamber inflammation graded using standardization of uveitis nomenclature (SUN).

Main Outcome Measure: Index test performance metrics (sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios), utility for "ruling-in" and "ruling-out" disease (positive/negative predictive values, PPV/NPV), receiver operating characteristic curves to explore the impact of different imaging-derived metrics, multivariable multilevel regression analyses to quantify correlation of index to reference testing, and repeatability indices across protocols.

Results: A total of 40 children (77 eyes: 51 eyes at SUN grade 0, 10 at SUN 0.5+, 8 at SUN 1+, and 8 SUN ≥2+ or higher) were included. There was high repeatability across protocols (0.98, P < .001, 95% CI: 0.75-1.0). OCT resulted in strong predictive values for "ruling-out" (LV-scan NPV 82.9%, 95% CI: 71.5%-90.4%; HV-scan NPV 100%, 95% CI: 3%-100%) but a less predictive value for "ruling-in" SUN ≥0.5+ (LV-scan PPV 52.8%, 95% CI: 41.5%-63.7%; HV-scan PPV 34.2%, 95% CI: 33.3%-35.1%). Detection of more than 1 cell within a cross-sectional scan was strongly suggestive of clinical activity, with an area under the curve of 0.76 (95% CI: 0.62-0.89) for SUN ≥0.5+ and 0.85 (95% CI: 0.73-0.98) for the detection of SUN ≥1+. Cell count correlated with SUN grades at higher levels of inflammation (SUN ≥2+ both protocols, SUN ≥1+ HV-scans). There was an independent positive association between age and AS-OCT cell (adjusted correlation coefficient 0.2 cells for each additional year of age).

Conclusions: Operator-dependent factors impact the diagnostic and quantification performance of AS-OCT for anterior chamber inflammation. However, the strong, "dose-respondent" correlation of LV protocols with SUN grading promises clinical utility without the storage and analysis burden of HV approaches. Further work will involve exploration of the need for age-specific image metric interpretation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2024.07.018DOI Listing

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