Anastasios John Kanellopoulos1, George Asimellis2. 1. Laservision.gr Eye Institute, Athens, Greece; New York University Medical School, New York, New York. Electronic address: ajk@brilliantvision.com. 2. Laservision.gr Eye Institute, Athens, Greece.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate in vivo epithelial thickness in dry eye by anterior segment optical coherence tomography. DESIGN: Observational, retrospective case-control study. METHODS: Two age-matched groups of female subjects, 70 eyes each, age ≈ 55 years, were studied in clinical practice setting: a control (unoperated, no ocular pathology) and a dry eye group (clinically confirmed dry eye, unoperated and no other ocular pathology). Corneal epithelium over the entire cornea was topographically imaged via a novel anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) system. Average, central, and peripheral epithelial thickness as well as topographic epithelial thickness variability were measured. RESULTS: For the control group, central epithelial thickness was 53.0 ± 2.7 μm (45-59 μm). Average epithelium thickness was 53.3 ± 2.7 μm (46.7-59.6 μm). Topographic thickness variability was 1.9 ± 1.1 μm (0.7-6.1 μm). For the dry eye group, central epithelial thickness was 59.5 ± 4.2 μm (50-72 μm) and average thickness was 59.3 ± 3.4 μm (51.4-70.5 μm). Topographic thickness variability was 2.5 ± 1.5 μm (0.9-6.9 μm). All pair tests of respective epithelium thickness metrics between the control and dry eye group show statistically significant difference (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: This study, based on very user-friendly, novel AS-OCT imaging, indicates increased epithelial thickness in dry eyes. The ease of use and the improved predictability offered by AS-OCT epithelial imaging may be a significant clinical advantage. Augmented epithelial thickness in the suspect cases may be employed as an objective clinical indicator of dry eye.
PURPOSE: To evaluate in vivo epithelial thickness in dry eye by anterior segment optical coherence tomography. DESIGN: Observational, retrospective case-control study. METHODS: Two age-matched groups of female subjects, 70 eyes each, age ≈ 55 years, were studied in clinical practice setting: a control (unoperated, no ocular pathology) and a dry eye group (clinically confirmed dry eye, unoperated and no other ocular pathology). Corneal epithelium over the entire cornea was topographically imaged via a novel anterior segment optical coherence tomography (AS-OCT) system. Average, central, and peripheral epithelial thickness as well as topographic epithelial thickness variability were measured. RESULTS: For the control group, central epithelial thickness was 53.0 ± 2.7 μm (45-59 μm). Average epithelium thickness was 53.3 ± 2.7 μm (46.7-59.6 μm). Topographic thickness variability was 1.9 ± 1.1 μm (0.7-6.1 μm). For the dry eye group, central epithelial thickness was 59.5 ± 4.2 μm (50-72 μm) and average thickness was 59.3 ± 3.4 μm (51.4-70.5 μm). Topographic thickness variability was 2.5 ± 1.5 μm (0.9-6.9 μm). All pair tests of respective epithelium thickness metrics between the control and dry eye group show statistically significant difference (P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: This study, based on very user-friendly, novel AS-OCT imaging, indicates increased epithelial thickness in dry eyes. The ease of use and the improved predictability offered by AS-OCT epithelial imaging may be a significant clinical advantage. Augmented epithelial thickness in the suspect cases may be employed as an objective clinical indicator of dry eye.
Authors: Jin Yuan; Hong Jiang; Xinjie Mao; Bilian Ke; Wentao Yan; Che Liu; Hector R Cintrón-Colón; Victor L Perez; Jianhua Wang Journal: Eye Contact Lens Date: 2015-11 Impact factor: 2.018