| Literature DB >> 30596660 |
Jo Lane1, Emilie M F Rohan2, Faran Sabeti2,3, Rohan W Essex4, Ted Maddess2, Amy Dawel1, Rachel A Robbins5, Nick Barnes6, Xuming He7, Elinor McKone1.
Abstract
AIMS: Previous studies and community information about everyday difficulties in age-related macular degeneration (AMD) have focussed on domains such as reading and driving. Here, we provide the first in-depth examination of how impaired face perception impacts social interactions and quality of life in AMD. We also develop a Faces and Social Life in AMD brochure and information sheet, plus accompanying conversation starter, aimed at AMD patients and those who interact with them (family, friends, nursing home staff).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30596660 PMCID: PMC6312296 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Individual patient details, with patients ordered by acuity (BCVA) in their best eye.
| Patient code & vision loss category | Age | Sex | Best Eye | Best Eye Diagnosis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | 85 | F | R | 6/7.5 | 6/15 | Dry AMD |
| P2 | 91 (93) | F | L | 6/9.5 | 6/19 | Wet AMD |
| P3 | 86 | F | R | 6/12 | 6/30 | Dry AMD |
| P4 | 70 | F | R | 6/12 | 6/19 | Wet AMD |
| P5 | 78 (78) | F | L | 6/15 | 6/38 | Wet AMD |
| P6 | 87 | F | R | 6/15 | 6/30 | Wet AMD |
| P7 | 86 | F | L | 6/15 | 6/60 | Dry AMD |
| P8 | 86 | F | R | 6/15 | 6/60 | Early AMD |
| P9 | 73 | F | R | 6/19 | 6/30 | Wet AMD |
| P10 | 79 | M | R | 6/19 | 6/48 | Dry AMD |
| P11 | 88 | M | L | 6/19 | 6/48 | Wet AMD |
| P12 | 92 | F | L | 6/24 | 6/38 | Early AMD |
| P13 | 66 (68) | F | L | 6/24 | 6/60 | Wet AMD |
| P14 | 82 | M | R | 6/38 | 6/48 | Wet AMD |
| P15 | 84 | F | L | 6/38 | 6/60 | Wet AMD |
| P16 | 78 | M | L | 6/60 | 6/95 | Dry AMD |
| P17 | 89 | F | R | <6/60 | – | Wet AMD |
| P18 | 82 | F | R | 6/75 | 6/150 | Dry AMD |
| P19 | 92 (94) | F | L | 6/75 | 6/120 | Wet AMD |
| P20 | 90 | M | L | 6/75 | 6/190 | Wet AMD |
| P21 | 91 | F | L | 6/190 | <6/240 | End-stage AMD |
Notes
1 Additional vision testing data, plus information for the other eye, in Table A S4 File.
2 Codes: M = male, F = female; L = left eye (i.e., OS, ocular sinister), R = right eye (i.e., OD, oculus dextrus); BCVA = Best Corrected Visual Acuity (high contrast letter stimuli), LCVA = Low Contrast Visual Acuity; "<" = worse than.
3 For the 4 participants with more than 6 months between interviews, age value in brackets gives the age at time of second interview. Table A S4 File provides acuity results on repeat test at time of second interview. None of the 4 participants' vision had degraded sufficiently to change them into a more severe vision loss category.
4 Participants P9 and P17 did not do the second interview due to ill health.
5 P17 did not have a vision assessment at the ANU and her visual acuity (BCVA only) was reported by her ophthalmologist. For correlations (Table 2) her BCVA value was entered as 6/60 or logMAR +1.0.
6 LCVA listed as <6/240 indicates the patient could not read all letters on the largest line of the LCVA chart.
Patient results and comparison values for quantitative questionnaires.
| Measure | Scale comparison values | All patients | Correlation with acuity (best-eye BCVA) ( | Means for vision loss subgroups | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | Mod | Severe | ||||
| 100 = no difficulty | 46.9(12.1) | –.47 | 50.0 | 48.4 | 39.5 | |
| Item A6 (face identity) | 100 = no difficulty | 32.1(26.4) | –.58 | 43.8 | 34.4 | 10.0 |
| Item Q11 (expression) | 100 = no difficulty | 55.6(32.7) | –.37 | 66.7 | 59.4 | 31.3 |
| 0–4 = normal | 4.5(2.7) | +.12 | 4.8 | 3.9 | 5.2 | |
| 0 = minimum anxiety level | 3.5(4.4) | +.45 | 2.3 | 2.6 | 6.8 | |
| +3 = improved QoL | -3.9(1.7) | –.41 | -3.7 | -3.1 | -5.4 | |
Notes
1 Composite score on NEI-VFQ-25 (National Eye Institute 25-Item Visual Functioning Questionnaire Interviewer Administered Format plus Appendix) is the average of the vision-targeted subscale scores, excluding the general health rating question [21].
2 NEI-VFQ-25 Item A6 = ‘Because of your eyesight, how much difficulty do you have recognizing people you know from across a room?’
3 NEI-VFQ-25 Item Q11 = ‘Because of your eyesight, how much difficulty do you have seeing how people react to things you say?’ For this question N = 18 as three patients did not answer (P6 and P18 said they did not know and P7 said it depends on distance).
4 Cut-offs from [34], GDS [29].
5 Cut-off to identify Generalised Anxiety Disorder in older adults from [30].
6 MacDQoL [10] measures macular-degeneration-associated change in quality of life (QoL), assessed across 23 domains. Scores are weighted impact score, calculated by multiplying patients' rating for AMD-change (–3 = maximum reduction in ability in that domain to +1 = improvement) by their rating of importance of that domain to them (0 to 3), and averaging across the 23 items (or fewer if a domain did not apply to patient, e.g., work).
7 Correlation directions (with acuity expressed as logMAR) are such that worsening visual acuity is associated with worse everyday visual function (negative r), increasing anxiety and depression (positive r), and poorer quality of life (negative r). For comparison of correlation to zero (two-tailed)
** = p < .01
* = p < .05
† = p < .07
8 Mild, moderate and severe vision loss groups, defined by best eye high-contrast visual acuity (BCVA, Table 1) using ICD-10 criteria [26] (see Method).
Difficulties seeing faces in AMD, how faces appear to patients, and problems with face identity and expression recognition.
| % of Patients Reporting this Experience | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description of Experience | Mild | Moderate | Severe | Total |
| AMD has made it harder to see faces | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| Unable to see faces properly even at close | 38+ | 50+ | 60+ | 48+ |
| Faces are hard to see on TV | 50 | 88 | 80 | 71 |
| Faces appear abnormal in some way: | 50+ | 100+ | 80+ | 76+ |
| - Faces appear blurred | 50+ | 88+ | 80+ | 71+ |
| - Faces appear distorted/have missing parts | 13+ | 38+ | 40+ | 29+ |
| - Other experiences (e.g. central black blob; black flecks) | 25+ | 25+ | 60+ | 33+ |
| 88+ | 88+ | 80+ | 86+ | |
| Impacted by lighting | 88+ | 88+ | 60+ | 81+ |
| Other factors (e.g., varies with time of day) | 50+ | 50+ | 60+ | 52+ |
| Problems recognising facial expressions | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| Problems recognising face identity | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| - failing to recognise people you know (false negatives) | 88+ | 88+ | 100 | 91+ |
| - ‘recognising’ people you don’t know (false positives) | 50+ | 88+ | 80+ | 71+ |
Notes
1 Mild, moderate and severe vision loss groups, defined by best eye high-contrast visual acuity (BCVA, Table 1) using ICD-10 criteria [26] (see Method).
Impact of reduced face perception on social life, confidence, and quality of life; plus lack of understanding by other people.
| % of patients reporting experience or responding ‘yes’ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description of Experience | Mild | Moderate | Severe | Total |
| - Missing out (e.g., can't join in with the jokes; | 63+ | 75+ | 100 | 76+ |
| - I disengage/isolate/withdraw in social situations | 63+ | 38+ | 100 | 62+ |
| - I am less willing to have social interactions due to my | 63 | 25 | 60 | 48 |
| - Problems seeing faces has reduced my confidence | 75 | 38 | 80 | 62 |
| - Problems seeing faces has reduced my quality of life | 75 | 63 | 100 | 76 |
| - Other people don't understand how AMD impacts my vision | 75+ | 50+ | 80+ | 76+ |
| - I worry other people think I'm faking it | 50+ | 25+ | 40+ | 38+ |
Alternative strategies that AMD patients try to use, and their effectiveness.
| % of Patients Reporting this Strategy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description of Strategy | Mild | Moderate | Severe | Total |
| Body shape/size | 38+ | 75+ | 80+ | 62+ |
| Walk/gait | 38+ | 63+ | 20+ | 43+ |
| Hair (colour, length, hairstyle) | 13+ | 50+ | 60+ | 38+ |
| Clothing | 25+ | 38+ | 20+ | 29+ |
| Voice | 100 | 75+ | 100 | 91+ |
| Context (expecting certain people in certain | 50+ | 25+ | 100 | 52+ |
| Body language | 25+ | 38+ | 20+ | 29+ |
| Auditory cues to emotion (e.g., tone of voice, | 100 | 63+ | 100 | 86+ |
| Proximity (e.g., wait for person to come closer so | 63+ | 100 | 40+ | 71+ |
| My strategies don't always work | 25+ | 62+ | 80+ | 52+ |
| Others help (e.g., tell me who is approaching) | 75+ | 88+ | 100 | 86+ |
Difficulties with, and changes to, social interactions arising from poor face perception.
| % of Patients Reporting or Endorsing this Experience | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description of Experience | Mild | Mod | Severe | Total |
| - "Some people with AMD may appear disengaged, this may be because they cannot see who is in a room." ( | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| - When I don't recognise others, I worry they will think I’m rude or unfriendly | 50+ | 63+ | 60+ | 57+ |
| - To avoid false recognition of someone I don't actually know, I am cautious / hesitant / noncommittal (e.g., I don't say people's names, wait for them to speak first) | 38+ | 25+ | 80+ | 43+ |
| - To try to avoid giving offence to people I know by ignoring them, I'm indiscriminately friendly (e.g., I smile at everyone) | 25+ | 25+ | 0+ | 19+ |
| - "People with AMD may be unable to see a person’s facial expressions i.e., whether someone looks happy, sad or bored. Because they cannot see facial expressions, they might miss social cues. For example, someone might be looking bored but the person with AMD can’t see this so they keep on talking, or a person might be just having a joke and is smiling when they say something, but the person with AMD takes it seriously." ( | 86 | 100 | 100 | 94 |
| - Patient gave specific example/s of above from their own experience | 38+ | 50+ | 20+ | 38+ |
| - Social interactions are slowed or take more mental effort | 63+ | 50+ | 80+ | 62+ |
| - Particular difficulty in groups | 38+ | 25+ | 40+ | 33+ |
| - I apologise | 63+ | 38+ | 60+ | 52+ |
| - I explain I have vision loss (or wear a vision impaired badge) | 88+ | 88+ | 100 | 90+ |
| - I use humour (laugh it off) | 25+ | 63+ | 60+ | 48+ |
| - I sometimes let it go/pretend there is no problem | 75+ | 88+ | 100 | 86+ |
| - I sometimes feel bad (embarrassed, frustrated, sad, upset) | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
| - I worry what other people think of me and how they judge me | 63+ | 88+ | 60+ | 71+ |
| - Others usually respond positively to my mistakes (e.g., humour, kindness, helpful) | 50+ | 50+ | 60+ | 52+ |
| - Others can get angry/upset when I make mistakes | 38+ | 25+ | 20+ | 29+ |
| - I sometimes can't tell how others respond (because I can't see their expressions) | 50+ | 63+ | 40+ | 52+ |
Notes: For the two statements listed in quotes, a subset of patients (N = 15, and N = 16) were read these statements, as part of the pre-testing phase for the patient information sheet (within Interview 2), and asked whether they agreed with them.
Other face problems: Eye gaze and facial speech.
| % of Patients Reporting this Experience | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description of Experience | Mild | Moderate | Severe | Total |
| 50+ | 38+ | 80+ | 52+ | |
| 38+ | 63+ | 40+ | 48+ | |