Combination of Simple Diagnostic Tests to Detect Primary Angle Closure Disease in a Resource-constrained Region.
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2019
: To report on diagnostic accuracy of van Herick (vH) technique performed by a vision technician (VT) as well as on efficacy of a combination of vH technique and central anterior chamber depth (ACD) in detection of primary angle closure disease. : Data was obtained from two cohorts; rural clinic setting (n = 111), and rural population-based research setting (n = 888). Van Herick grading was performed by a VT in first cohort and a glaucoma specialist in second cohort. A reference standard four-mirror gonioscopy was performed by a glaucoma specialist in both cohorts. We did preferential sampling. Cut-off levels for vH technique and central ACD were grade 2 and 25 percentile value, respectively. Data from one eye per participant was analyzed. : Three hundred and forty (34%) eyes were gonioscopically occludable. Area under receiver operating characteristic curve (95% confidence interval) for vH test was 0.83 (0.76, 0.9) and 0.81 (0.78, 0.84) in first and second cohorts, respectively. Simultaneous testing achieved sensitivity of 87.8% while sequential testing achieved specificity of 99.3%. Negative predictive value* of simultaneous testing was 98.3% compared to 96.6% of vH technique while positive predictive value* of sequential testing was 86% compared to 49.3% of vH technique. (*at 10% prevalence of gonioscopically occludable angle) : Diagnostic accuracy of vH grading was similar when performed by a VT and a glaucoma specialist. While test combination was effective to rule in, vH technique may suffice to rule out the disease. Implications of these findings for resource-constrained regions are discussed.
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choudhari2019combinationophthalmic
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Authors | Choudhari, Nikhil S;George, Ronnie;Asokan, Rashima;Khanna, Rohit;Vijaya, Lingam;Garudadri, Chandra Sekhar; |
Journal | ophthalmic epidemiology |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | 10.1080/09286586.2019.1650380 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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