Inter-observer agreement and sensitivity of Optomap images for screening peripheral retinal lesions in patients undergoing refractive surgery

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Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to compute the sensitivity, specificity and inter-reader variability of ultra-widefield retinal imaging (Optomap 200Tx) for screening retinal lesions before myopic refractive surgery. Methods: Two hundred and eight eyes of 109 consecutive refractive surgery candidates were included in this study. All subjects underwent Optomap 200Tx, mydriatic slit-lamp lens examination and dilated retinal examination with scleral indentation by a retinal specialist. Retinal findings by indirect dilated examination by retinal specialist was considered as the gold-standard. Sensitivity analyses for the readers were calculated between the Optomap images and the gold-standard retinal examination. Results: Seventy-three of the 208 eyes (35.1%) had peripheral retinal lesions diagnosed by the retinal specialist on dilated fundus examination. Peripheral lesions were seen on the Optomap images in 111 (53.4%) eyes. Compared to the dilated retinal examination, the detection rate with the Optomap 200Tx was 78.1% and specificity rate was 60%. The accuracy rate between the 3 readers ranged from 72% to 87%. The highest accuracy was noted with the reader post 1 year of retinal training (86.54%). Conclusion: The Optomap 200Tx showed a high sensitivity and moderate specificity for identifying peripheral retinal lesions in eyes undergoing refractive surgery. The Optomap examination is a convenient, fast and feasible method for detecting the pathological fundus changes in myopic eyes. The reliability of the examination improves when the images are interpreted by a reader with prior retinal training.

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Venkatesh, R., Cherry, J. P., Reddy, N. G., Anilkumar, A., Sridharan, A., Sangai, S., … Jayadev, C. (2020). Inter-observer agreement and sensitivity of Optomap images for screening peripheral retinal lesions in patients undergoing refractive surgery. Indian Journal of Ophthalmology, 68(12), 2930–2934. https://doi.org/10.4103/ijo.IJO_2239_20

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