BMC Ophthalmology (Jun 2022)

Evaluation of a self-imaging SD-OCT system designed for remote home monitoring

  • Judy E. Kim,
  • Oren Tomkins-Netzer,
  • Michael J. Elman,
  • David R. Lally,
  • Michaella Goldstein,
  • Dafna Goldenberg,
  • Shiri Shulman,
  • Gidi Benyamini,
  • Anat Loewenstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12886-022-02458-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Purpose To compare identification rates of retinal fluid of the Notal Vision Home Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) device (NVHO) when used by people with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) to those captured by a commercial OCT. Methods Prospective, cross-sectional study where patients underwent commercial OCT imaging followed by self-imaging with either the NVHO 2.5 or the NVHO 3 in clinic setting. Outcomes included patients’ ability to acquire analyzable OCT images with the NVHO and to compare those with commercial images. Results Successful images were acquired with the NVHO 2.5 in 469/531 eyes (88%) in 264/290 subjects (91%) with the mean (SD) age of 78.8 (8.8); 153 (58%) were female with median visual acuity (VA) of 20/40. In the NVHO 3 cohort, 69 eyes of 45 subjects (93%) completed the self-imaging. Higher rates of successful imaging were found in eyes with VA ≥ 20/320. Positive percent agreement/negative percent agreement for detecting the presence of subretinal and/or intraretinal fluid when reviewing for fluid in three repeated volume scans were 97%/95%, respectively for the NVHO v3. Conclusion Self-testing with the NVHO can produce high quality images suitable for fluid identification by human graders, suggesting the device may be able to complement standard-of-care clinical assessments and treatments.

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