Digital Health (Jun 2023)

Remote vision testing of central retinal acuity and comparison with clinic-based Snellen acuity testing in patients followed for retinal conditions

  • Earnest P Chen,
  • Michael Mills,
  • Tara Gallagher,
  • Andrew Polis,
  • Sophie Blasberg,
  • Peter Pham,
  • Ronald C Gentile,
  • Tsontcho Ianchulev,

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076231180727
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Introduction The unmet need for remote monitoring of visual function with home-based, patient-centric technologies became increasingly palpable during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many patients with chronic eye conditions lack access to office-based examinations. Here, we evaluate the efficacy of the Accustat® test, a virtual application for measuring near visual acuity on any portable electronic device via telehealth. Materials and methods Thirty-three adult subjects from the telehealth remote monitoring service of a retina practice performed the Accustat® acuity testing at home. All patients underwent in-office general eye examination with additional fundoscopic examination and optical coherence tomography retina imaging. Best corrected visual acuity assessment using a Snellen chart was compared with remote visual acuity assessment with the Accustat® test. Visual acuity was analyzed and compared between the best-corrected near visual acuity potential achieved on the Accustat® and in-office distance best-corrected Snellen visual acuity. Results The mean logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) visual acuities of all eyes tested using the Accustat test was 0.19 ± 024 and for the office Snellen test 0.21 ± 0.21. A linear regression model with 95% confidence intervals reveals that there is a strong linear relationship between Accustat logMAR and office Snellen logMAR. Bland–Altman analysis demonstrated 95.2% significant agreement between Accustat and Office Snellen’s best corrected visual acuity. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC = 0.94) demonstrated a strong positive correlation between at home versus office visual acuity. Conclusion There was a high correlation between the visual acuity measured with the Accustat near vision digital self-test and the office Snellen acuity test, suggesting the potential utility of scalable remote monitoring of central retinal function via telehealth.