| Literature DB >> 34345031 |
Sana Hamid1, Parul Desai1, Pirro Hysi2,3, Jennifer M Burr4, Anthony P Khawaja5.
Abstract
Effective population screening for glaucoma would enable earlier diagnosis and prevention of irreversible vision loss. The UK National Screening Committee (NSC) recently published a review that examined the viability, effectiveness and appropriateness of a population-based screening programme for primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG). In our article, we summarise the results of the review and discuss some future directions that may enable effective population screening for glaucoma in the future. Two key questions were addressed by the UK NSC review; is there a valid, accurate screening test for POAG, and does evidence exist that screening reduces morbidity from POAG compared with standard care. Six new studies were identified since the previous 2015 review. The review concluded that screening for glaucoma in adults is not recommended because there is no clear evidence for a sufficiently accurate screening test or for better outcomes with screening compared to current care. The next UK NSC review is due to be conducted in 2023. One challenge for POAG screening is that the relatively low disease prevalence results in too many false-positive referrals, even with an accurate test. In the future, targeted screening of a population subset with a higher prevalence of glaucoma may be effective. Recent developments in POAG polygenic risk prediction and deep learning image analysis offer potential avenues to identifying glaucoma-enriched sub-populations. Until such time, opportunistic case finding through General Ophthalmic Services remains the primary route for identification of glaucoma in the UK and greater public awareness of the service would be of benefit.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34345031 PMCID: PMC8873198 DOI: 10.1038/s41433-021-01687-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye (Lond) ISSN: 0950-222X Impact factor: 3.775
Search criteria for key review questions.
| Key question | Intervention | Comparator | Outcome | Study type | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| What is the diagnostic accuracy of screening tests for open-angle glaucoma in the adult population? | Any testing tools for open-angle glaucoma | Optic disc assessment and standard achromatic white on white perimetry | Measures of the predictive validity of screening tests | Studies in randomly assigned or consecutively enroled populations prioritised | Case control studies, case reports, case series, reviews, non- peer reviewed literature Non-English language publications Studies published before October 2014 |
| Are there any RCTs assessing whether a screening programme for open-angle glaucoma in the adult is effective in reducing morbidity? | Screening programmes to identify individuals at high risk of OAG; • direct and indirect ophthalmoscopy • fundus photography or computerised imaging of the posterior pole, optic disc, or retinal nerve • pachymetry • perimetry • tonometry | Current diagnostic methods Any treatment, no treatment or placebo | Chronic OAG eye damage - measurements of visual impairment as defined by included studies | Systematic reviews, meta-analyses, randomised controlled trials | Non-English language publications Studies published before October 2014 |
RCTs randomised controlled trials, OAG open-angle glaucoma.
Screening test performance for suspected and definitive POAG.
| Study (sample size) | Screening test | Sensitivity % | Specificity % | Positive predictive value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visual field loss | Dabasia et al. [ | FDT perimetry (≥1 missed location at p < 1% level) | 62.1% (suspected POAG) 88.5% (definitive POAG) | 80.5% (suspected POAG) 79.1% (definitive POAG) | NR |
| MMDT perimetry (global probability of true damage ≥3.0) | 51.7% (suspected POAG) 65.4% (definitive POAG) | 82.8% (suspected POAG) 81.2% (definitive POAG) | NR | ||
Intraocular pressure Cut-off points for referral ranged from >21 mmHg to >28 mmHg | Dabasia et al. [ | NCT (ORA cc) IOP > 21 mmHg | 26.9% (definitive POAG) 24.1% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) | 87.9% (definitive POAG) 88.6% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) | NR |
| Wahl et al. [ | NCT (at least 1 eye IOP > 21 mmHg) | 44.45% (suspected POAG) 61.54% (definitive POAG) | 92.68% (suspected POAG) 91.57% (definitive POAG) | 17.04 (suspected POAG) 2.23 (definitive POAG) | |
Abnormality of optic nerve and retina Cut-offs points of cup to disc ratio for referral ranged between >0.5 and >0.8 | Dabasia et al. [ | OCT GCC—focal loss of volume | 46.6% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 73.1% (definitive POAG) | 91.4% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 90.3% (definitive POAG) | NR |
| OCT GCC—global loss of volume | 24.1% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 46.2% (definitive POAG) | 98.2% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 97.9% (definitive POAG) | NR | ||
| OCT RNFL thickness inferior quadrant | 46.6% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 76.9% (definitive POAG) | 96.2% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 95% (definitive POAG) | NR | ||
FDT Frequency doubling technology, NR not reported, MMDT Moorfield Motion Displacement Test, NCT non-contact tonometry, ORA Ocular Response Analyser, OCT optical coherence tomography, IOP intraocular pressure, RNFL retinal nerve fibre layer, GCC ganglion cell complex.
Combined screening test performance for suspected and definitive POAG.
| Study | Screening test combination | Performance reported | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity % | Specificity % | Positive predictive value | ||
| Song et al. [ | CDR ratio (cut-offs ranged from >0.5 to >0.65), CDR difference between eyes (≥0.2), RNFL defect and IOP ( > 21 mmHg) | NR | NR | 61.4% (suspected POAG) 25.5% (definitive POAG) |
| Hark et al. [ | NR | NR | 78.1% (suspected/definitive POAG) | |
| Zhao et al. [ | Visual acuity test, CDR (>0.7) and IOP (≥23 mmHg) | 97% (for some form of ocular abnormality) | 92% (for some form of ocular abnormality) | NR |
| Boland et al. 2016 [ | CDR (≥0.6) and FDT perimetry (2 or more missed locations at the | 66% | 70% | NR |
| Dabasia et al. [ | Inferior quadrant RNFL thickness and FDT perimetry | 79.3% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 100% (definitive POAG) | 63.3% (combined suspected/definitive POAG) 65.2% (definitive POAG) | 22.5% (combined definitive and suspect POAG) 14.8%. (definitive POAG) |
| Wahl et al. [ | FDT perimetry, non-mydriatic fundus imaging and NCT | 83.78 (suspected POAG) 84.62 (definitive POAG) | 99.43 (suspected POAG) 99.98 (definitive POAG) | 80.14 (suspected POAG) 91.67 (definitive POAG) |
| NCT (1 eye IOP > 21 mmHg) or FDT perimetry (abnormal) | 65.77 (suspected POAG) 100% (definitive POAG) | 87.55 (suspected POAG) 86.40 (definitive POAG) | 12.63 (suspected POAG) 2.25 (definitive POAG) | |
| NCT (at least 1 eye IOP employees aged >21 mmHg) and FDT abnormal | 6.31 (suspected POAG) 15.38 (definitive POAG) | 99.65 (suspected POAG) 99.54 (definitive POAG) | 33.33 (suspected POAG) 9.52 (definitive POAG) | |
CDR cup-disc ratio, FDT frequency doubling technology, NR not reported, NCT non-contact tonometry, IOP intraocular pressure, GCC ganglion cell complex, RNFL retinal nerve fibre layer.
Fig. 1Predictive performance of a screening test (73% sensitivity and 96% specificity) when applied to an inception cohort of 50 years of age with a glaucoma prevalence of 0.9%.
Fig. 2Predictive performance of a screening test (73% sensitivity and 96% specificity) targeted to a subset of the inception cohort aged 50 years with high genetic risk for glaucoma (an enriched prevalence of 0.9% × 4.2 = 3.8%).