Literature DB >> 29625475

Diagnostic Performance and Repeatability of a Novel Game-Based Visual Field Test for Children.

Tariq Mehmood Aslam1,2, Zaria Christine Ali1, Yanfang Wang2, Cecilia Fenerty1, Susmito Biswas1, Emmanouil Tsamis2, David Barry Henson1,2.   

Abstract

Purpose: To demonstrate utility of a game-based test ("Caspar's Castle") for the detection of visual field defects in children.
Methods: A validity and reliability study was carried out at Manchester Royal Eye Hospital Pediatric Ophthalmology Outpatients Department. We recruited 108 children with no eye pathology (aged 4-12 years) and examined a single eye with the Caspar's Castle system using either normal thresholds or thresholds artificially adapted to recreate defects to assess diagnostic utility. Number of peripheral stimuli missed was used to determine sensitivity and specificity of artificial defect detection and to plot receiver-operator characteristic curves. A further 21 children (aged 4-16 years) with pathology were recruited and Caspar's fields compared qualitatively with established field testing. A total of 106 of the Caspar's Castle examinations were able to be performed twice and repeatability was determined through coefficient of repeatability and Bland-Altman chart.
Results: In diagnostic testing using children with no eye pathology, 45 children completed a test using normal thresholds and 43 with tests using artificial defects. Area under receiver-operator characteristic curves for artificial defect detection was 0.895. Of the 21 children with pathology, seven had completed standard Humphreys field testing and Caspar's Castle fields corresponded with each of these by expert opinion. Coefficient of repeatability for number of points missed across all cohorts of children (106 patients) was 6.9 (95% confidence interval: 6.16-8.07). Conclusions: The Caspar's Castle system of assessing visual fields using novel game-based strategies demonstrates encouraging levels of sensitivity, specificity, and reliability. It could help address current difficulties in perimetry in young children.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29625475     DOI: 10.1167/iovs.17-23546

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci        ISSN: 0146-0404            Impact factor:   4.799


  1 in total

1.  Study of Optimal Perimetric Testing In Children (OPTIC): developing consensus and setting research priorities for perimetry in the management of children with glaucoma.

Authors:  Dipesh E Patel; Phillippa M Cumberland; Bronwen C Walters; Joseph Abbott; John Brookes; Beth Edmunds; Peng Tee Khaw; Ian Christopher Lloyd; Maria Papadopoulos; Velota Sung; Mario Cortina-Borja; Jugnoo S Rahi
Journal:  Eye (Lond)       Date:  2021-06-21       Impact factor: 4.456

  1 in total

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