Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2020)

Comparison of Drusen Volume Assessed by Two Different OCT Devices

  • Marco Beck,
  • Devika S. Joshi,
  • Lieselotte Berger,
  • Gerd Klose,
  • Sandro De Zanet,
  • Agata Mosinska,
  • Stefanos Apostolopoulos,
  • Andreas Ebneter,
  • Martin S. Zinkernagel,
  • Sebastian Wolf,
  • Marion R. Munk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082657
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 2657

Abstract

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To compare drusen volume between Heidelberg Spectral Domain (SD-) and Zeiss Swept-Source (SS) PlexElite Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) determined by manual and automated segmentation methods. Thirty-two eyes of 24 patients with Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD) and drusen maculopathy were included. In the central 1 and 3 mm ETDRS circle drusen volumes were calculated and compared. Drusen segmentation was performed using automated manufacturer algorithms of the two OCT devices. Then, the automated segmentation was manually corrected and compared and finally analyzed using customized software. Though on SD-OCT, there was a significant difference of mean drusen volume prior to and after manual correction (mean difference: 0.0188 ± 0.0269 mm3, p p 3, p = 0.262, corr. p = 0.524, r = 1.0). Heidelberg-acquired mean drusen volume after manual correction was significantly different from Zeiss-acquired drusen volume after manual correction (mean difference: 0.1231 ± 0.0371 mm3, p p 3, p = 0.02, corr. p = 0.08, r = 0.937). Heidelberg SD-OCT, the Zeiss PlexElite SS-OCT, and customized software all measured significantly different drusen volumes. Therefore, devices/algorithms may not be interchangeable. Third-party customized software helps to minimize differences, which may allow a pooling of data of different devices, e.g., in multicenter trials.

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