| Literature DB >> 21573106 |
Sarah Mackenzie1, Christian Schmermer, Amanda Charnley, Dawn Sim, Martin Dumskyj, Stephen Nussey, Catherine Egan.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Diabetic macular edema (DME) is an important cause of vision loss. England has a national systematic photographic retinal screening programme to identify patients with diabetic eye disease. Grading retinal photographs according to this national protocol identifies surrogate markers for DME. We audited a care pathway using a spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) clinic to identify macular pathology in this subset of patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21573106 PMCID: PMC3089611 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
ENSC grading.
| ENSC Grade | Clinical features | |
|
|
| No diabetic retinopathy |
|
| (Background) Microaneurysm(s), Retinal haemorrhage(s) ± any exudates (not within the definition of maculopathy) | |
|
| (Pre-proliferative) venous beading venous loop or reduplication intra-retinal microvascular abnormality (IRMA) multiple deep, round or blot haemorrhages Cotton Wool Spots (careful search for above features) | |
|
| (Proliferative) new vessels on disc (NVD) new vessels elsewhere (NVE) pre-retinal or vitreous haemorrhage pre-retinal fibrosis ± tractional retinal detachment | |
|
|
| No maculopathy |
|
| M1 grade is defined as: Exudate within 1 disc diameter (DD) of the centre of the fovea, or circinate or group of exudates within the macula, or retinal thickening within 1 DD of the centre of the fovea (if stereo available), or any microaneurysm or haemorrhage within 1 DD of the centre of the fovea only if associated with a best VA of (if no stereo) 6/12 or worse. | |
|
|
| evidence of focal/grid laser to macula evidence of peripheral scatter laser |
|
|
| Unobtainable/un-gradable |
DD; disc diameter, VA; visual acuity.
Figure 1OCT clinic pathway.
The number of patients identified in this study at each section of this pathway are highlighted. Note that any R2 and R3 identified at primary screening are referred directly to ophthalmology clinic and do not enter the SDOCT clinical pathway represented in Figure 1.
Outcome of primary SDOCT visits (n = 311).
| Outcome | Reason | No |
| Referred for maculopathy | Positive OCT | 119 |
| Referred for other than maculopathy (n = 25) | Technical failure | 7 |
| Epiretinal membrane/traction | 5 | |
| Age related macular degeneration | 2 | |
| Branch retinal vein occlusion | 1 | |
| Cataract | 1 | |
| Macular telangiectasia | 1 | |
| Central serous retinopathy | 1 | |
| Refraction and primary care | 1 | |
| Other: Hard drusen; choroidal folds, macular crystals; unexplained poor vision, peripapillary lesion; RAP; pigment epithelial detachment | 6 | |
| Further OCT (n = 143) | Negative OCT | 131 |
| Borderline OCT | 12 | |
| Referred back to screening programme (n = 24) | Improved/unreliable VA | 8 |
| Resolved maculopathy | 5 | |
| Drusen ± RPE changes | 4 | |
| Exudates >1 DD from fovea | 4 | |
| Macula crystal | 1 | |
| Other: refraction; artefact; | 2 |
RAP; retinal angiomatous proliferation, RPE; retinal pigment epithelium, DD; disc diameter.
Table footnote: SDOCT borderline scans had an intra-retinal cystic space on a single scan without a change in the ILM contour. This group has recently been published as having a variety of causes for this appearance, not limited to DME, and was identified as a group to be observed. [20]