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At-Home Glaucoma Testing


A new study from City, University of London adds to a body of evidence suggesting that home monitoring can address several pressing issues associated with glaucoma.

The study, published in the American Journal of Ophthalmology, is the first to suggest that glaucoma eye tests can be performed accurately at home by patients themselves, using a prototype, tablet-based eye test called Eyecatcher.

According to Pete Jones, PhD, first author of the study and a lecturer at the division of optometry and visual sciences at City, “This is tremendously exciting news. Effective home monitoring would be a win-win-win for patients, clinicians, and the taxpayer alike, and it looks like the technology finally exists to make it a reality. This news is particularly timely, since home monitoring is just one of the ways we can help make the NHS [National Health Service] more resilient and sustainable post COVID.”

Glaucoma is a chronic condition that affects cells at the back of the eye. It is the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide and is responsible for 1 in 10 cases of serious sight impairment in the United Kingdom (UK).

People with glaucoma or at risk of developing glaucoma require lifelong monitoring, including regular eye tests, to track the progression of the disease. Currently, these examinations require regular hospital visits (eg, twice yearly for life) and use expensive, specialist equipment.

Aging populations make this hospital-only model of patient management unsustainable, and many clinics are already overstretched, with appointments routinely delayed or cancelled. In the UK today, around 20 people per month are going blind as a result of this appointment backlog.

This situation has been compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic, since the inability to sanitize equipment between use has led to all routine sight assessments being suspended in the UK. The long-term effects of this are unknown, but experts suggest that further increases in appointment delays and avoidable blindness appear inevitable.

Even if routine assessments are ever fully resumed, it is also thought that the current system of annual hospital visits is insufficient to track the most aggressive forms of glaucoma. Multiple studies have already suggested that more frequent (eg, monthly) glaucoma eye tests could substantially improve clinical outcomes, allowing high-risk patients to be treated sooner and more appropriately.

The research involved 20 NHS-participating patients with glaucoma from across England and Wales who were provided with Eyecatcher for six months. Using the device, they were asked to run the home glaucoma eye test themselves, testing each of their eyes once per month.

Similar to conventional eye tests for glaucoma, patients looked at a central cross presented on the device and pressed a button when they saw a flash of light, which appeared at different locations and was of variable intensity. To ensure people performed the test correctly, the computer’s front-facing camera also recorded them during the test, and artificial intelligence was used to perform facial recognition and head and eye tracking.

Accuracy was assessed by comparing measurements made at home with conventional “gold standard” assessments performed in clinics at both the start and end of the study. Adherence was quantified as the percentage of tests completed.

The study found that 98% of home tests were completed successfully (high adherence), and that the data from the home-monitoring tests were in strong agreement with the gold standard clinical assessments (high accuracy).

The use of home-monitoring data was also shown to reduce measurement error when combined with current clinical data (by more than 50% in 90% of eyes). Home monitoring could potentially allow cases of rapid eyesight loss to be detected months or even years earlier.

Future studies will examine whether home monitoring is sustainable over longer periods and is capable of detecting rapidly progressing cases of glaucoma. The study’s authors are also preparing a follow-up study that will present the participants’ views and opinions regarding home monitoring.

The source code for Eyecatcher is freely available online.

— Source: City University London