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department:Ophthalmology

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353


Response of Diabetic Macular Edema to Anti-VEGF Medications Correlates with Improvement in Macular Vessel Architecture Measured with OCT Angiography

Massengill, Michael T; Cubillos, Samuel; Sheth, Neil; Sethi, Abhishek; Lim, Jennifer I
PURPOSE/UNASSIGNED:Improvements in best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and central subfield thickness (CST) have been well documented after intravitreal injection of anti-VEGF medications in diabetic macular edema (DME); however, their effect on the vasculature of the macula in diabetic retinopathy (DR) remains poorly understood. Our aim was to explore the effect of intravitreal injection of anti-VEGF on parameters of retinal vascular microstructure in DR with OCT angiography (OCTA). DESIGN/UNASSIGNED:Retrospective study of adult patients with DME that were treated with anti-VEGF intravitreal injections at the University of Illinois at Chicago between 2017 and 2022. PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:Forty-one eyes from 30 patients with nonproliferative or proliferative DR with a mean age of 58.83 ± 11.71 years, mean number of intravitreal injections of 2.8 ± 1.4, and mean follow-up of 6.5 ± 1.7 months. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:tests and analysis of variance were used to determine statistical significance. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:A primary analysis was performed comparing the mean of each parameter of all patients as a single group at the beginning and end of the study period. A subgroup analysis was then performed after stratifying patients based on visual improvement, change in CST, prior injection history, and number of injections. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Eyes demonstrated statistical improvement in BCVA logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution score and CST after anti-VEGF treatment. Primary analysis showed a reduction in the vessel diameter of the superficial and deep retinal vasculature, as well as an increase in the circularity of the FAZ within the superficial retinal vasculature after anti-VEGF treatment. Subgroup analysis revealed that eyes with improvement in BCVA exhibited reduced vessel diameter in the superficial retinal vasculature and that eyes with the largest decrease in CST displayed increased perfusion density and VLD in the deep retinal vasculature. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Intravitreal injection of anti-VEGF agents to treat DME improved parameters of retinal vascular microstructure on OCTA over a period of 3 to 9 months, and this effect was most pronounced in eyes that experienced improvement in BCVA and CST. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES/UNASSIGNED:Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article.
PMCID:11141254
PMID: 38827030
ISSN: 2666-9145
CID: 5922972

Rod mediated dark adaptation, a functional test for early and intermediate AMD outcomes

Owsley, Cynthia; Swain, Thomas A; Kar, Deepayan; Curcio, Christine A
PMCID:10869142
PMID: 38370915
ISSN: 1746-9899
CID: 5929252

Imaging Modalities for Assessing the Vascular Component of Diabetic Retinal Disease: Review and Consensus for an Updated Staging System

Tan, Tien-En; Jampol, Lee M; Ferris, Frederick L; Tadayoni, Ramin; Sadda, Srinivas R; Chong, Victor; Domalpally, Amitha; Blodi, Barbara L; Duh, Elia J; Curcio, Christine A; Antonetti, David A; Dutta, Sanjoy; Levine, S Robert; Sun, Jennifer K; Gardner, Thomas W; Wong, Tien Yin
PURPOSE/UNASSIGNED:To review the evidence for imaging modalities in assessing the vascular component of diabetic retinal disease (DRD), to inform updates to the DRD staging system. DESIGN/UNASSIGNED:Standardized narrative review of the literature by an international expert workgroup, as part of the DRD Staging System Update Effort, a project of the Mary Tyler Moore Vision Initiative. Overall, there were 6 workgroups: Vascular Retina, Neural Retina, Systemic Health, Basic and Cellular Mechanisms, Visual Function, and Quality of Life. PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:The Vascular Retina workgroup, including 16 participants from 4 countries. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Literature review was conducted using standardized evidence grids for 5 modalities: standard color fundus photography (CFP), widefield color photography (WFCP), standard fluorescein angiography (FA), widefield FA (WFFA), and OCT angiography (OCTA). Summary levels of evidence were determined on a validated scale from I (highest) to V (lowest). Five virtual workshops were held for discussion and consensus. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:Level of evidence for each modality. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Levels of evidence for standard CFP, WFCP, standard FA, WFFA, and OCTA were I, II, I, I, and II respectively. Traditional vascular lesions on standard CFP should continue to be included in an updated staging system, but more studies are required before they can be used in posttreatment eyes. Widefield color photographs can be used for severity grading within the area covered by standard CFPs, although these gradings may not be directly interchangeable with each other. Evaluation of the peripheral retina on WFCP can be considered, but the method of grading needs to be clarified and validated. Standard FA and WFFA provide independent prognostic value, but the need for dye administration should be considered. OCT angiography has significant potential for inclusion in the DRD staging system, but various barriers need to be addressed first. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:This study provides evidence-based recommendations on the utility of various imaging modalities for assessment of the vascular component of DRD, which can inform future updates to the DRD staging system. Although new imaging modalities offer a wealth of information, there are still major gaps and unmet research needs that need to be addressed before this potential can be realized. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES/UNASSIGNED:Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article.
PMCID:10837643
PMID: 38313399
ISSN: 2666-9145
CID: 5930622

Deep Learning Assisted Imaging Methods to Facilitate Access to Ophthalmic Telepathology

Browne, Andrew W; Kim, Geunwoo; Vu, Anderson N; To, Josiah K; Minckler, Don S; Estopinal, Maria Del Valle; Rao, Narsing A; Curcio, Christine A; Baldi, Pierre F
PURPOSE/UNASSIGNED:To investigate the use of super-resolution imaging techniques to enable telepathology using low-cost commercial cameras. DESIGN/UNASSIGNED:Experimental study. PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:A total of 139 ophthalmic pathology slides obtained from the Ophthalmic Pathology service at the University of California, Irvine. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:Denoising Diffusion Probabilistic Model (DDPM) was developed to predict super-resolution pathology slide images from low-resolution inputs. The model was pretrained using 150 000 images randomly sampled from the ImageNet dataset. Patch aggregation was used to generate large images with DDPM. The performance of DDPM was evaluated against that of generative adversarial networks (GANs) and Robust UNet, which were also trained on the same dataset. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:The performance of models trained to generate super-resolution output images from low-resolution input images can be evaluated by using the mean squared error (MSE) and Structural Similarity Index Measure (SSIM), as well as subjective grades provided by expert pathologist graders. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:In total, our study included 110 training images, 9 validation images, and 20 testing images. The objective performance scores were averaged over patches generated from 20 test images. The DDPM-based approach with pretraining produced the best results, with an MSE score of 1.35e-5 and an SSIM score of 0.8987. A qualitative analysis of super-resolution images was conducted by expert 3 pathologists and 1 expert ophthalmic microscopist, and the average accuracy of identifying the correct ground truth images ranged from 25% to 70% (with an average accuracy of 46.5%) for widefield images and 25% to 60% (with an average accuracy of 38.25%) for individual patches. CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:The DDPM-based approach with pretraining is assessed to be effective at super-resolution prediction for ophthalmic pathology slides both in terms of objective and subjective measures. The proposed methodology is expected to decrease the reliance on costly slide scanners for acquiring high-quality pathology slide images, while also streamlining clinical workflow and expanding the scope of ophthalmic telepathology. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES/UNASSIGNED:Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article.
PMCID:10847934
PMID: 38327842
ISSN: 2666-9145
CID: 5930632

Risk factors for severe retinopathy of prematurity stratified by birth weight and gestational age in privately insured infants

Moir, John T.; Hyman, Max J.; Skondra, Dimitra; Rodriguez, Sarah H.
ISI:001386190100001
ISSN: 1091-8531
CID: 5994452

The Association Between Metformin Use and New-Onset ICD Coding of Geographic Atrophy

Moir, John; Hyman, Max J.; Gonnah, Reem; Flores, Andrea; Hariprasad, Seenu M.; Skondra, Dimitra
ISI:001208353700004
ISSN: 0146-0404
CID: 5994482

RETINA-THE JOURNAL OF RETINAL AND VITREOUS DISEASES

Wang, Jessie; Rodriguez, Sarah H.; Xiao, Jason; Luo, Wendy; Gonnah, Reem; Shaw, Lincoln; Dao, David; Schechet, Sidney A.; Mackin, Anna G.; Komati, Rahul; Skondra, Dimitra
ISI:001173108000005
ISSN: 0275-004x
CID: 5994492

JOURNAL FRANCAIS D OPHTALMOLOGIE [Letter]

Dao, D.; Komati, R.; Golas, L.; Skondra, D.
ISI:001199880100001
ISSN: 0181-5512
CID: 5994502

OPHTHALMIC SURGERY LASERS & IMAGING RETINA

Moir, John; Kaufmann, Gabriel; Rodriguez, Sarah H.; Nourian, Niloofaralsadat; Rasheed, Mohammed Abdul; Vupparaboina, Kiran Kumar; Chhablani, Jay; Skondra, Dimitra
ISI:001163793600009
ISSN: 2325-8160
CID: 5994522

JAMA OPHTHALMOLOGY

Aggarwal, Sarthak; Moir, John; Hyman, Max J.; Kaufmann, Gabriel T.; Flores, Andrea; Hariprasad, Seenu M.; Skondra, Dimitra
ISI:001112128600004
ISSN: 2168-6165
CID: 5994552