Literature DB >> 25559203

Precision and agreement of corneal power measurements obtained using a new corneal topographer OphthaTOP.

Jinhai Huang1, Giacomo Savini2, Hao Chen3, Fangjun Bao1, Yuanguang Li3, Haisi Chen3, Weicong Lu3, Ye Yu1, Qinmei Wang1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate repeatability and reproducibility of anterior corneal power measurements obtained with a new corneal topographer OphthaTOP (Hummel AG, Germany) and agreement with measurements by a rotating Scheimpflug camera (Pentacam HR, Oculus, Germany) and an automated keratometer (IOLMaster, Carl Zeiss Meditec, Germany).
METHODS: The right eyes of 79 healthy subjects were prospectively measured three times with all three devices. Another examiner performed three additional scans with the OphthaTOP in the same session. Within one week, the first examiner repeated the measurements using the OphthaTOP. The flat simulated keratometry (Kf), steep K (Ks), mean K (Km), J0, and J45 were noted. Repeatability and reproducibility of measurements were assessed by within-subject standard deviation (Sw), repeatability (2.77 Sw), coefficient of variation (CoV), and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Agreement between devices was assessed using 95% limits of agreement (LoA).
RESULTS: Intraobserver repeatability and interobserver and intersession reproducibility of all measured parameters showed a 2.77 Sw of 0.29 diopter or less, a CoV of less than 0.24%, and an ICC of more than 0.906. Statistically significant differences (P<0.001) were found between the parameters analyzed by the three devices, except J0 and J45. The mean differences between OphthaTOP and the other two devices were small, and the 95% LoA was narrow for all results.
CONCLUSIONS: The OphthaTOP showed excellent intraobserver repeatability and interobserver and intersession reproducibility of corneal power measurements. Good agreements with the other two devices in these parameters were found in healthy eyes.

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Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25559203      PMCID: PMC4283956          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109414

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

The requirement for precise measurements and assessments of corneal topography is increasing. Most patients undergoing cataract or refractive surgery expect to experience excellent postoperative uncorrected visual acuity, [1] and for this purpose an accurate and precise examination of such patients’ ocular parameters is mandatory.[2]–[6] In addition, corneal power is indispensable to analyzing the shape of the cornea and for fitting contact lenses.[7]–[10] Incorrect or invalid information may result in misdiagnosing the keratoconus or misjudging the appropriate timing of treatment. And it will lead to errors in contact lens design and fitting and in the visual outcome, increasing discomfort and complications. At present, several types of commercially available technologies can be used to measure the corneal curvature and calculate the corneal power.[2], [11] Automated keratometry (e.g., IOLMaster, Carl Zeiss Meditec, Germany)[12], [13] measures the cornea curvature by analyzing the distance between the reflected images. Videokeratography systems perform corneal topography by reflecting Placido disk rings on the cornea and then extracting curvature data from these images of the anterior corneal surface.[14], [15] Corneal tomography, such as provided by rotating Scheimpflug cameras, can provide a relatively whole image of the anterior segment of the eye to analyze corneal power and other parameters. Examples of this technology include Sirius (CSO, Italy); Galilei (Ziemer, Switzerland); Pentacam (Oculus Optikgeräte GmbH, Germany); and TMS-5 (Tomey, Japan) [5], [16]. The OphthaTOP (Hummel AG, Germany) is a new Placido disk-based corneal topographer. To our knowledge, the precision of this device in corneal power measurement had never been studied. In addition, there were no studies that represented the agreement between this new device and other instruments, such as Pentacam or IOLMaster, which are widely used in common clinical practice. The purpose of this study was to prospectively evaluate the intraoperator repeatability, interoperator and intersession reproducibility of corneal power measurements derived by the OphthaTOP, and then to estimate agreement of these measurements with those obtained using the Pentacam and IOLMaster.

Subjects and Methods

Ethics Statement

The study was conducted at the Eye Hospital of Wenzhou Medical University. The research was performed in accordance with the principles stated in the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the Office of Research Ethical Committee, Wenzhou Medical University. All participants provided written informed consent after the nature of the study had been explained to them.

Subjects

This prospective study enrolled 79 normal, healthy subjects, including 26 males and 53 females. Only the right eye of each subject was selected for measurement. The mean age was 25.22±6.99 years (range 22 to 62 years), and the mean spherical equivalent refraction was −3.58±2.35 diopters (range 0 to −9.5 diopters). Inclusion criteria were healthy subjects without communication or cooperation disorders. All the subjects had good fixation ability, and their intraocular pressures were in the range of 10 mmHg to 21 mmHg. The exclusion criteria were 1) history of ocular pathological changes; 2) history of corneal or intraocular trauma; 3) previous ophthalmologic operation; 4) wearing soft contact lens within 2 weeks or rigid gas permeable contact lenses within 4 weeks; 5) dry eye (significant subjective symptoms, or tear film break-up time shorter than 5 seconds); and 6) acute or chronic systemic severe disease.

Instruments

The OphthaTOP is a new device based on the Placido disk to get corneal topography. In the present study, software version V2.19 was used. It projects 30 rings onto the cornea and acquires the data of 10,800 measurement points at a time. All images are captured automatically once the green spot for starting, and the red spot for laser locating, are adjusted at the appropriate positions. During each scan, the device captures seven images continually, and then combines these images to get a final corneal topography. It converts the curvature results of the anterior corneal surface into a cornea dioptric value using the formula below:where n1 is the keratometric index (1.3375) and n0 represents the refractive index of air (1.0000). In this study, we analyzed the two perpendicular meridians with the largest curvature difference within a diameter of about 3.5 mm to get the keratometry (K) value. The Pentacam HR uses a rotating Scheimpflug camera to get the image of the anterior segment of the eye. It captures 138,000 true elevation points using a high-resolution, 1.45 mega-pixel camera. In the present study, the automatic release mode was used and 25 slit images of the anterior segment were obtained in less than 2 seconds. Only the results with an examination quality specification of “OK” were accepted for analysis. A keratometric index of 1.3375 was also used for calculation of corneal power and the K values were obtained via the data from a diameter of about 3.0 mm. The IOLMaster works according to the optical principle of reflection by the anterior surface of six bright spots in the center of the cornea. The six points are reflected at a diameter of approximately 2.5 mm. The keratometric index of 1.3375 was used to calculate the corneal power.

Measurement Protocol

The present study’s definitions of repeatability, reproducibility, and agreement were based on those adopted by the British Standards Institute and the International Organization for Standardization.[17]–[19] Calibration of each device was performed by the manufacturer prior to data collection. The sequence of the examiners was in consecutive order. Each subject was measured by the first experienced examiner using all three devices to determine intraobserver repeatability, and each device performed three times with valid results. Three additional consecutive scans were obtained by a second experienced observer using the new corneal topographer to determine interoperator reproducibility. Then the measurements were repeated by the first observer within 2 days to 7 days to determine intersession reproducibility. The second session was carried out at almost the same time as the first session. The sequence of the devices was randomly chosen. Less than 5 minutes were spent when each subject was examined with the OphthaTOP and the total time of all devices measurements was less than 30 minutes. All subjects were asked to perform a complete blink every time just before measurement, and they were told to sit back after each measurement to ensure the device was realigned before the next measurement. All the measurements were carried out at least 3 hours after the subjects woke from sleep. Examinations were taken at 10 AM and 5 PM. And all subjects were affirmed to have avoided substantial reading prior to the measurements [20].

Statistical Analysis

All data were analyzed using SPSS software for Windows version 20 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, USA) and MedCalc Statistical Software version 13.0 (MedCalc Software, Inc., Mariakerke, Belgium). A P value less than 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant. The distribution of all the data obtained was not significantly different from normal after checking with Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests (P>0.05). During each measurement, the flat (Kf) and steep keratometry (Ks) values, the average keratometry (Km), and the axes of Kf and Ks were acquired. Corneal astigmatism was converted into a vector representation of Jackson J0 and J45. J0 means cylinder at 0-degree meridian, and J45 means cylinder at 45-degree meridian. They were calculated according to the following formulas [21]: Where the cylinder was the corneal astigmatism magnitude, i.e. the difference between Ks and Kf, and the axis was the meridian of Ks. These values were calculated for three measurements during each session and then averaged to determine the reproducibility and comparability. To determine the intrasession repeatability of OphthaTOP, the within-subject standard deviation (Sw), test-retest repeatability (TRT), within-subject coefficient of variation (CoV), and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) were calculated for the three repeated measurements obtained by the two examiners. The test-retest repeatability was defined as 2.77 Sw, which means an interval within which 95% of the differences between measurements are expected to lie.[22] The CoV was calculated as the ratio of the Sw to the overall mean (a lower CoV stands for higher repeatability). Using the CoV values, data with different units or widely different means can be compared between each other. However, the disadvantage is that when the mean value is near zero, the CoV becomes sensitive to small changes in the mean. Because the mean values of J0 and J45 are both near zero, we did not calculate the CoV for them. The ICCs (ranging from 0 to 1) are a reliability coefficient calculated from variance estimates obtained through an analysis of variance, and a value more than 0.9 indicates acceptable clinical reliability.[23], [24] To assess interoperator and intersession reproducibility, the mean of the three readings from each operator and session was calculated for each device first. Then the interoperator and intersession Sw, 2.77 Sw, CoV, and ICCs were calculated. Repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) with the Bonferroni correction was used to identify pairs that were significantly different. Agreement among the devices was assessed according to the method described by Bland and Altman. It involved the use of the 95% limits of agreement (LoA) as the mean difference ±1.96 standard deviation (SD). Narrower 95% LoA is associated with higher agreement between each other [19].

Results

Repeatability and reproducibility of corneal power measurements obtained using the OphthaTOP corneal topographer

Table 1 shows the mean values Sw, 2.77 Sw, CoV, and ICCs for the Kf, Ks, Km, and power vectors J0 and J45 for the three continuous measurements. The CoV values of K were no more than 0.24%, and the ICCs were more than 0.9 for all parameters. Therefore, this new device shows high intraobserver repeatability in measuring corneal power.
Table 1

Intraobserver Repeatability of Flat Keratometry (Kf), Steep Keratometry (Ks), Mean Keratometry (Km), Vector J0 and J45 Measurements Obtained Using the OphthaTOP Conceal Topographer.

ParametersobserverMean (D) ± SDSw (D)2.77 Sw (D)CoV (%)ICC
Kf1st42.87±1.330.090.240.200.996
2nd42.85±1.330.100.270.230.994
Ks1st43.93±1.500.100.290.240.995
2nd43.95±1.510.100.280.230.996
Km1st43.41±1.400.080.210.180.997
2nd43.39±1.390.090.240.200.996
J0 1st−0.49±0.330.060.170.966
2nd−0.49±0.320.050.140.975
J45 1st0.00±0.150.050.130.906
2nd0.00±0.150.040.110.930

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, Sw = within-subject standard deviation, CoV = within-subject coefficient of variation, ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient.

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, Sw = within-subject standard deviation, CoV = within-subject coefficient of variation, ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient. Table 2 shows the mean values Sw, 2.77 Sw, CoV, and ICCs of the Kf, Ks, Km, J0, and J45 for the assessment of interobserver reproducibility. The CoV values of K were less than 0.20%, the Sw and 2.77 Sw values were within 0.09D and 0.24D. The Sw and 2.77 Sw of J0 and J45 values were within 0.04D and 0.11D, respectively, and ICCs of all parameters were above 0.94. The results indicate that the interobserver reproducibility of this new topographer was excellent.
Table 2

Interobserver reproducibility of Flat Keratometry (Kf), Steep Keratometry (Ks), Mean Keratometry (Km), Vector J0 and J45 Measurements Obtained Using the OphthaTOP Conceal Topographer.

ParameterMean (D) ± SDSw (D)2.77 Sw (D)CoV (%)ICC
Kf42.86±1.330.060.170.140.998
Ks43.94±1.500.090.240.200.997
Km43.40±1.390.060.170.140.998
J0 −0.49±0.320.040.110.984
J45 0.00±0.140.040.100.942

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, Sw = within-subject standard deviation, CoV = within-subject coefficient of variation, ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient.

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, Sw = within-subject standard deviation, CoV = within-subject coefficient of variation, ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient. There were also no significant differences in the measurements between the first and the second session (Table 3). The Sw and 2.77 Sw values of Kf, Ks, and Km were within 0.10D and 0.29D. The CoV values were less than 0.24%. The Sw and 2.77 Sw of J0 and J45 values were within 0.05D and 0.13D, respectively.
Table 3

Intersession reproducibility of Flat Keratometry (Kf), Steep Keratometry (Ks), Mean Keratometry (Km), Vector J0 and J45 Measurements Obtained Using the OphthaTOP Conceal Topographer.

ParameterMean (D) ± SDSw (D)2.77 Sw (D)CoV (%)ICC
Kf42.87±1.340.080.210.180.997
Ks43.94±1.520.100.290.240.995
Km43.41±1.410.080.220.180.997
J0 −0.48±0.330.050.130.980
J45 0.00±0.140.040.110.921

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, Sw = within-subject standard deviation, CoV = within-subject coefficient of variation, ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient.

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, Sw = within-subject standard deviation, CoV = within-subject coefficient of variation, ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient.

Comparison of devices

Table 4 shows the mean corneal power measurements by the Pentacam and IOLMaster. The Kf, Ks, and Km values obtained using the OphthaTOP and the Pentacam were statistically different (P<0.001), while the J0 and J45 values showed no statistical difference (P>0.05) (Table 5). Furthermore, a similar result was found between the parameters measured by the OphthaTOP and the IOLMaster, as the Kf, Ks, and Km values were statistically different (P<0.001), whereas J0 and J45 did not show any statistically significant difference (P>0.05) (Table 6). Although both Pentacam and IOLMaster showed higher corneal power readings than the OphthaTOP, the 95% LoA was narrow–i.e. close or lower than 0.50D in all cases. This means that agreement among these devices was relatively good (Figs. 1 to 5).
Table 4

Flat Keratometry (Kf), Steep Keratometry (Ks), Mean Keratometry (Km), Vector J0 and J45 Measurements Obtained Using the Pentacam Rotating Scheimpflug System and the IOLMaster.

ParameterMean (D) ± SD
PentacamIOLMaster
Kf43.06±1.3443.15±1.35
Ks44.12±1.4744.27±1.53
Km43.59±1.3843.71±1.42
J0 −0.46±0.33−0.50±0.35
J45 −0.02±0.170.01±0.18

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation.

Table 5

Comparison of Flat Keratometry (Kf), Steep Keratometry (Ks), Mean Keratometry (Km), Vector J0 and J45 Measurements Obtained Using the OphthaTOP Conceal Topographer and the Pentacam Rotating Scheimpflug System.

ParameterMean Difference ± SD P Value95% LoA
Kf (D)−0.19±0.13<0.001−0.45 to 0.06
Ks (D)−0.17±0.18<0.001−0.53 to 0.19
Km (D)−0.18±0.14<0.001−0.45 to 0.09
J0 −0.03±0.100.059−0.23 to 0.17
J45 0.02±0.080.133−0.14 to 0.18

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, LoA = limits of agreement.

Table 6

Comparison of Flat Keratometry (Kf), Steep Keratometry (Ks), Mean Keratometry (Km), Vector J0 and J45 Measurements Obtained Using the OphthaTOP Conceal Topographer and the IOLMaster.

ParameterMean Difference ± SD P Value95% LoA
Kf (D)−0.28±0.11<0.001−0.48 to −0.07
Ks (D)−0.32±0.15<0.001−0.62 to −0.02
Km (D)−0.30±0.09<0.001−0.48 to −0.13
J0 0.01±0.100.772−0.19 to 0.21
J45 −0.01±0.111.000−0.22 to 0.21

D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, LoA = limits of agreement.

Figure 1

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of flat K for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA.

Figure 5

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of vector J45 for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA.

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of flat K for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA.

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of steep K for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA.

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of mean K for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA.

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of vector J0 for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA.

Bland-Altman plots showing the means plotted against the differences in values of vector J45 for a comparison between the new corneal topographer OphthalTop and Pentacam Scheimpflug camera (A) and between the new corneal topographer and IOLMaster automated keratometer (B).

The solid line indicates the mean difference (bias). The upper and lower lines represent the 95% LoA. D = diopter, SD = standard deviation. D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, LoA = limits of agreement. D = diopter, SD = standard deviation, LoA = limits of agreement.

Discussion

More and more corneal topographers are being produced and applied to clinical routine. This study was aimed at evaluating the precision and agreement of a new corneal topographer, the OphthaTOP. Our data showed high intraobserver repeatability of the Placido disk-based corneal topographer’s measurement of corneal power, with a low Sw (no more than 0.10D), a low CoV (less than 0.25%), and high ICC (more than 0.90) values. The current results are comparable to the repeatability of other Placido disk-based corneal topographers. The Medmont E300 (Medmont Pty Ltd, Melbourne, Australia) is a Placido disk-based videokeratoscope. It has 32 Placido rings, measures 9,600 data points during every scan, and has been found to be highly accurate and repeatable.[9], [25] Chui et al.[26] found the repeatability of the Medmont was good for the measurement of apical radius (R0) and flattest corneal curvature, and the 95% LoA values of R0 and flattest corneal curvature between the two measurements were −0.06 to +0.06 mm and −0.10 to +0.13 mm, respectively. Another instrument–the EyeSys System (EyeSys Vision, INC, Houston, Texas, USA), which contains 26 Placido disks and measures 9,360 points–had been reported for its high repeatability in corneal curvature measurement by Gonzalez Perez et al.[27] and Jeandervin et al.[28] Both studies were conducted using calibration surface, and the coefficient of repeatability was less than 0.06 mm for all examiners in the former. Wang et al.[29] compared eight different devices in their study and found high repeatability of Medmont, with a small 2.77 Sw and CoV values of less than 0.23D and 0.18%, respectively, and high ICCs (>0.997). The 2.77 Sw, CoV, and ICC values of EyeSys were less than 0.36D, less than 0.30%, and more than 0.989, respectively. Those values with the Topolyzer (WaveLight Technologie AG, Erlangen, Germany), a videokeratoscope that contains 22 Placido rings and analyzes 22,000 data points, were less than 0.35D, less than 0.29%, and above 0.993, respectively. Compared with the EyeSys and Topolyzer, the 2.77 Sw and CoV values of the OphthaTOP in our study were even lower. In addition, we got similarly high interobserver reproducibility and intersession reproducibility of corneal power values captured by the OphthaTOP. The maximum 2.77 Sw, maximum CoV, and minimum ICCs values were 0.24D, 0.20%, 0.942 and 0.29D, 0.24%, 0.921, respectively. Compared with the Keratron (Optikon 2000 SpA, Rome, Italy)–which was found to have good interobserver reproducibility without statistically significant difference of the mean values between two observers and with a 95% LoA for the flattest meridian (ranging from −0.50 to +0.33D) and the steepest meridian (ranging from −0.53 to +0.31D)[30]–the OphthaTOP seems to perform better in the current study. The measurements with OphthaTOP were comparable to the study of Mao et al.[31], in which the Placido disk-based corneal topographer Keratograph 4 (Oculus Optikgeräte GmbH, Germany) had shown excellent interoperator reproducibility and intersession reproducibility. The CoV of K values were within 0.15% and 0.21%, respectively, and the Sw and 2.77 Sw of all parameters were within 0.06D, 0.17D, and 0.09D, 0.25D, respectively. To our knowledge, no previous study had tested agreement of the OphthaTOP with other devices in corneal power measurement. Previous studies had shown that the Pentacam and IOLMaster, which are both widely used and validated devices, have good precision and agreement.[12], [29], [32]–[34] Therefore, we compared the OphthaTOP with these two instruments, and our results confirmed relatively good agreement between the OphthaTOP and Pentacam and between the OphthaTOP and IOLMaster, although the OphthaTOP provided lower mean corneal powers. As a representative of the rotating Scheimpflug camera system, Pentacam had shown its positive repeatability and reproducibility in quite a few studies previously.[32], [34] In earlier studies, it had been compared with other instruments that are based on the Placido disk. Kawamorita et al.[30] found that mean axial power for the central corneal power values obtained by Pentacam was statistically significantly lower than the Keratron (P<0.003), and the 95% LoA values between the two devices for the Kf and Ks were −1.16 to +0.28D and −1.06 to +0.55D, respectively. In the study by Savini et al., [35] the 95% LoA of the Km values between Pentacam and TMS-2 (Tomey, Erlangen, Germany) and between the Pentacam and Keratron reached −1.05 to +0.94D and −0.95 to +1.02D, respectively. However, Scott et al.[36] found good agreement between the Pentacam and the Medmont for measurements of axial power best-fit spherocylinder power vectors; the maximum range of the LoA values were 0.40D to −0.17D. With the data of the current study, the mean values of the corneal power were close between the devices and the 95% LoA of all parameters were narrow, with the maximum 95% LoA range of −0.53 to 0.19D. In a previous study of IOLMaster, the IOLMaster provided statistically significantly steeper readings than the RK-F1 AutoRef-Keratometer (Canon Inc., Japan) (P<0.001), with the mean difference of the Kf and Ks within 0.29D (the range of 95% LoA was −0.08 to 0.66D) and 0.18D (the range of 95% LoA was −0.34 to 0.66D).[37] When compared with the manual keratometry, the IOLMaster showed higher agreement than some other devices, such as EyeSys. The mean difference of minimum keratometry, maximum keratometry, and mean keratometry between the manual Javal keratometer (Haag-Streit) and IOLMaster was just 0.09±0.24D, 0.27±0.41D, and 0.18±0.24D, respectively, and the 95% LoA was −0.57D to 0.38D, −1.06 to 0.53D, and −0.66 to 0.30D, respectively.[11] In our study, the IOLMaster produced the highest corneal power values among all the devices. The mean difference between the OphthaTOP and IOLMaster was −0.32±0.15D, and the 95% LoA values were in a narrow range of −0.62 to −0.02D. Some other studies comparing the IOLMaster with other corneal topographers found that it produces higher readings, which is in agreement with our results. Wang et al.[29] found a maximum mean difference of 0.13±0.21D, with a maximum 95% LoA range of −0.68 to 0.06D between the IOLMaster and the Topolyzer. Mao et al.[31] reported a maximum 95% LoA range of −0.28 to 0.62D between the IOLMaster and Keratograph 4, with relatively higher values generated by the former. In the present study, the new corneal topographer provided the flattest corneal power values. As is well known, the shape of the corneal surface is not a sphere but rather can be described through a conic section by the radius of curvature and asphericity measurement.[38]–[40] The corneal curvature values are steeper in the central area and become flatter in the peripheral zones. Among these instruments, the analyzing area of the OphthaTOP is the largest, with a diameter of 3.5 mm, while the area of Pentacam is 3.0 mm and the IOLMaster is just 2.5 mm. This, to some extent, could explain the difference of corneal power values among the devices. With regard to the analysis of astigmatism, we converted the keratometric values into the Jackson cross cylinder notation J0 and J45, as previously described by Thibos et al. [21] Good agreement among different devices in measuring corneal astigmatism has not been found by all studies. When assessing agreement of corneal astigmatism between Placido topography and Scheimpflug tomography, Delrivo et al. [41] found a statistically significant difference in the J0 and not in the J45 vector. Greater differences were observed in lower degrees of astigmatism. However, in the present study, neither J0 nor J45 showed any statistically significant difference between the devices, although the astigmatic magnitude was always lower than 2 D. Similar results were shown in the Mao et al.’s [31] study, as no clinically significant difference was found between the Keratograph 4 and IOLMaster or Pentacam. The performance of videokeratoscopes is limited by several other factors, including alignment and focusing techniques, camera resolution, and the computer algorithms of the instrument.[25] The OphthaTOP is designed to capture images automatically when the two dots are aligned in a small area, and good alignment and focusing techniques are also ensured in the other two devices. Muller et al.[42] found that the rigidity of the most anterior part of the corneal stroma in extreme hydration states plays an important role in maintenance of corneal curvature. Swelling of the surface of the cornea will increase variance, so we conducted our examination after the subjects had been awake for hours. This study has some limitations, warranting further investigation. The age distribution of subjects we enrolled was not very wide. The understanding, collaboration, and fixation of all the subjects were good, but according to our experience, the subjects had to keep their eyes open as widely as possible to ensure a perfect image capture using the new corneal topographer, so additional studies are needed to evaluate the precision and agreement in older subjects and in children. Tang et al.[25] chose six different test surfaces to evaluate the reliability of different topographers, but the performance of the devices was just good on certain surfaces. In our study, the subjects were mostly normal, healthy individuals without too much shape variation, and the degree of astigmatism was no more than −2.0 diopter, so further studies are needed to determine the performance in patients with high astigmatism or keratoconus. Furthermore, other Placido-based devices analyzing corneal topography are commercially available, and more studies should be carried out to assess their agreement. Finally, another major function of the OphthaTOP is intraocular lens power calculation, and additional investigation could be made to assess achievement of this purpose. In summary, the corneal power values provided by the OphthaTOP corneal topographer showed excellent intraobserver repeatability and interobserver and intersession reproducibility in corneal power measurement of normal healthy eyes. Our data showed good agreement between the OphthaTOP and Pentacam and between the OphthaTOP and IOLMaster, notwithstanding a statistically significant difference in corneal power measurements, whose mean values were lower with the OphthaTOP. Corneal power data file. (XLS) Click here for additional data file.
  40 in total

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Authors:  Wuhe Chen; Colm McAlinden; Konrad Pesudovs; Qinmei Wang; Fan Lu; Yifan Feng; Jie Chen; Jinhai Huang
Journal:  J Cataract Refract Surg       Date:  2012-07-03       Impact factor: 3.351

2.  A comparative study of the performance of different corneal topographers on children with respect to orthokeratology practice.

Authors:  Wan Sang Chui; Pauline Cho
Journal:  Optom Vis Sci       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 1.973

3.  The topography of the central and peripheral cornea.

Authors:  Scott A Read; Michael J Collins; Leo G Carney; Ross J Franklin
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 4.799

4.  Repeatability, reproducibility, and agreement of corneal power measurements obtained with a new corneal topographer.

Authors:  Xinjie Mao; Giacomo Savini; Zuopao Zhuo; Yifan Feng; Jian Zhang; Qinmei Wang; Hao Chen; Jinhai Huang
Journal:  J Cataract Refract Surg       Date:  2013-07-13       Impact factor: 3.351

5.  Comparison of three computerized videokeratoscopy systems with keratometry.

Authors:  R C Moura; B L Bowyer; S X Stevens; J J Rowsey
Journal:  Cornea       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 2.651

6.  Comparison of repeat videokeratography: repeatability and accuracy.

Authors:  M Jeandervin; J Barr
Journal:  Optom Vis Sci       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 1.973

7.  A comprehensive evaluation of the precision (repeatability and reproducibility) of the Oculus Pentacam HR.

Authors:  Colm McAlinden; Jyoti Khadka; Konrad Pesudovs
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2011-09-29       Impact factor: 4.799

Review 8.  Power vectors: an application of Fourier analysis to the description and statistical analysis of refractive error.

Authors:  L N Thibos; W Wheeler; D Horner
Journal:  Optom Vis Sci       Date:  1997-06       Impact factor: 1.973

9.  Comparison of keratometric values of healthy and diseased eyes measured by Javal keratometer, EyeSys, and PAR.

Authors:  D Varssano; C J Rapuano; J I Luchs
Journal:  J Cataract Refract Surg       Date:  1997-04       Impact factor: 3.351

10.  A comprehensive assessment of the precision and agreement of anterior corneal power measurements obtained using 8 different devices.

Authors:  Qinmei Wang; Giacomo Savini; Kenneth J Hoffer; Zhen Xu; Yifan Feng; Daizong Wen; Yanjun Hua; Feng Yang; Chao Pan; Jinhai Huang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-09-25       Impact factor: 3.240

View more
  5 in total

1.  Simulated Keratometry Repeatability in Subjects with and without Down Syndrome.

Authors:  Ayeswarya Ravikumar; Jason D Marsack; Julia S Benoit; Heather A Anderson
Journal:  Optom Vis Sci       Date:  2016-11       Impact factor: 1.973

Review 2.  Corneal topography in keratoconus: state of the art.

Authors:  F Cavas-Martínez; E De la Cruz Sánchez; J Nieto Martínez; F J Fernández Cañavate; D G Fernández-Pacheco
Journal:  Eye Vis (Lond)       Date:  2016-02-22

3.  Precision (Repeatability and Reproducibility) and Agreement of Corneal Power Measurements Obtained by Topcon KR-1W and iTrace.

Authors:  Yanjun Hua; Zequan Xu; Wei Qiu; Qiang Wu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-01-11       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Comparison of a New Optical Biometer That Combines Scheimpflug Imaging With Partial Coherence Interferometry With That of an Optical Biometer Based on Swept-Source Optical Coherence Tomography and Placido-Disk Topography.

Authors:  Shihao Chen; Qiaoyue Zhang; Giacomo Savini; Shuangzhe Zhang; Xiaomin Huang; Jinjin Yu; Yirang Wang; Rui Ning; Jinhai Huang; Ruixue Tu
Journal:  Front Med (Lausanne)       Date:  2022-02-10

5.  Comparison of Anterior Corneal Aberrometry, Keratometry and Pupil Size with Scheimpflug Tomography and Ray Tracing Aberrometer.

Authors:  Zahra Ashena; Sean Gallagher; Hasan Naveed; David J Spalton; Mayank A Nanavaty
Journal:  Vision (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-18
  5 in total

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