Ophthalmology (Eye & Ear Hospital) - Research Publications

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    Ellipsoid zone on optical coherence tomography: a review
    Tao, LW ; Wu, Z ; Guymer, RH ; Luu, CD (WILEY, 2016-07)
    Emergence of the high-resolution optical coherence tomography has allowed better delineation of retinal layers, and many of the anatomical correlations of these layers have now been agreed upon. However, some anatomical correlates still remain contentious, such as the second hyper-reflective band, which is now termed ellipsoid zone. Despite the lack of consensus of the actual origin of the ellipsoid zone, there has been much interest in evaluating its integrity and intensity in different disease processes. This review paper aims to provide an overview of the ellipsoid zone and its clinical and research applications.
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    Relationship between reticular pseudodrusen and choroidal thickness in intermediate age-related macular degeneration: response
    Ho, CYD ; Lek, JJ ; Aung, KZ ; McGuinness, MB ; Luu, CD ; Guymer, RH (WILEY, 2018-11)
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    Relationship between reticular pseudodrusen and choroidal thickness in intermediate age-related macular degeneration
    Ho, CYD ; Lek, JJ ; Aung, KZ ; McGuinness, MB ; Luu, CD ; Guymer, RH (WILEY, 2018-07)
    IMPORTANCE: Reticular pseudodrusen (RPD) is strongly associated with late age-related macular degeneration (AMD) but their aetiology remains unknown. RPD have been associated with reduced choroidal thickness (ChT) but most studies are limited by small sample size and varying severity of AMD. BACKGROUND: To investigate the relationship between choroidal thickness and RPD in eyes with intermediate AMD (iAMD), controlling for variables known to influence ChT. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: Participants were recruited from Centre for Eye Research Australia. METHODS: Colour fundus photographs, fundus auto fluorescence, near-infrared and spectral-domain ocular coherence tomography (OCT) were graded for RPD. ChT was measured from enhanced-depth imaging OCT scans at the centre of fovea, 1500 and 3000 μm nasal, temporal, superior and inferior from centre of fovea. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: ChT between RPD and non-RPD group. RESULTS: A total of 297 eyes from 152 subjects were included. A total of 84 (28%) had RPD and were older than non-RPD group (75.1 ± 5.4 years and 68.7 ± 6.9 years, respectively; P < 0.001). In unadjusted analysis, the RPD group was significantly associated with thinner choroids across all measured locations (P ≤ 0.022). After adjustment for variables, the presence of RPD was no longer associated with ChT (P ≥ 0.132 for all locations) but age (P < 0.001) and refractive error (P = 0.002) remained significantly associated with ChT. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Age and refractive error, rather than RPD, was significantly associated with reduced ChT in eyes with iAMD. Choroidal insufficiency may be a less important variable in RPD aetiology than previously considered.
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    Advances in implantable bionic devices for blindness: a review
    Lewis, PM ; Ayton, LN ; Guymer, RH ; Lowery, AJ ; Blamey, PJ ; Allen, PJ ; Luu, CD ; Rosenfeld, JV (WILEY, 2016-09)
    Since the 1950s, vision researchers have been working towards the ambitious goal of restoring a functional level of vision to the blind via electrical stimulation of the visual pathways. Groups based in Australia, USA, Germany, France and Japan report progress in the translation of retinal visual prosthetics from the experimental to clinical domains, with two retinal visual prostheses having recently received regulatory approval for clinical use. Regulatory approval for cortical visual prostheses is yet to be obtained; however, several groups report plans to conduct clinical trials in the near future, building upon the seminal clinical studies of Brindley and Dobelle. In this review, we discuss the general principles of visual prostheses employing electrical stimulation of the visual pathways, focusing on the retina and visual cortex as the two most extensively studied stimulation sites. We also discuss the surgical and functional outcomes reported to date for retinal and cortical prostheses, concluding with a brief discussion of novel developments in this field and an outlook for the future.
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    Classification of healthy and diseased retina using SD-OCT imaging and Random Forest algorithm
    Hussain, MA ; Bhuiyan, A ; Luu, CD ; Smith, RT ; Guymer, RH ; Ishikawa, H ; Schuman, JS ; Ramamohanarao, K ; Vavvas, DG (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2018-06-04)
    In this paper, we propose a novel classification model for automatically identifying individuals with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) or Diabetic Macular Edema (DME) using retinal features from Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography (SD-OCT) images. Our classification method uses retinal features such as the thickness of the retina and the thickness of the individual retinal layers, and the volume of the pathologies such as drusen and hyper-reflective intra-retinal spots. We extract automatically, ten clinically important retinal features by segmenting individual SD-OCT images for classification purposes. The effectiveness of the extracted features is evaluated using several classification methods such as Random Forrest on 251 (59 normal, 177 AMD and 15 DME) subjects. We have performed 15-fold cross-validation tests for three phenotypes; DME, AMD and normal cases using these data sets and achieved accuracy of more than 95% on each data set with the classification method using Random Forrest. When we trained the system as a two-class problem of normal and eye with pathology, using the Random Forrest classifier, we obtained an accuracy of more than 96%. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) finds a value of 0.99 for each dataset. We have also shown the performance of four state-of-the-methods for classification the eye participants and found that our proposed method showed the best accuracy.
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    Repeatability of Retinal Sensitivity Measurements Using a Medmont Dark-Adapted Chromatic Perimeter in Healthy and Age-Related Macular Degeneration Cases
    Tan, RS ; Guymer, RH ; Luu, CD (ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC, 2018-05)
    PURPOSE: To determine the intrasession and intersession test-retest repeatability of retinal sensitivity measurements using a dark-adapted chromatic perimeter (DACP). METHODS: For intrasession testing, retinal sensitivity within the central 24° for the 505-nm stimulus was measured after 20, 30, and 40 minutes of dark adaptation (DA) and for the 625-nm stimulus was measured after the first and second 505-nm tests. For intersession testing, retinal sensitivity for both stimuli was measured after 30 minutes of DA at baseline and 1 month. The point-wise sensitivity (PWS) difference and coefficient of repeatability (CoR) of each stimulus and group were determined. RESULTS: For intrasession testing, 10 age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and eight control subjects were recruited. The overall CoR for the 505-nm stimulus was 8.4 dB for control subjects and 9.1 dB for AMD cases, and for the 625-nm stimulus was 6.7 dB for control subjects and 9.5 dB for AMD cases. For intersession testing, seven AMD cases and 13 control subjects returned an overall CoR for the 505-nm stimulus of 8.2 dB for the control and 11.7 dB for the AMD group. For the 625-nm stimulus the CoR was 6.2 dB for the control group and 8.4 dB for the AMD group. Approximately 80% of all test points had a PWS difference of ±5 dB between the two intrasession or intersession measurements for both stimuli. CONCLUSIONS: The CoR for the DACP is larger than that reported for scotopic perimeters; however, the majority of test points had a PWS difference of ±5 dB between tests. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: The DACP offers an opportunity to measure static and dynamic rod function at multiple locations with an acceptable reproducibility level.
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    Presymptomatic Retinal Sensitivity Changes in Intermediate Age-Related Macular Degeneration Associated With New Retinal Fluid
    Wightman, AJ ; Abbott, CJ ; McGuinness, MB ; Caruso, E ; Guymer, RH ; Luu, CD (ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC, 2019-11)
    PURPOSE: To determine whether change in retinal sensitivity in areas with subretinal or intraretinal fluid secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD) precedes visual symptoms. If confirmed, retinal sensitivity testing could be used for home monitoring in AMD. METHODS: Individuals with intermediate AMD enrolled in a longitudinal study were seen every 6 months and underwent best-corrected visual acuity testing (BCVA), spectral domain-optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), and microperimetry. Asymptomatic individuals who developed incidental, reading center-determined retinal fluid detected on SD-OCT were identified. The point-wise sensitivity (PWS) at the time of fluid detection was compared with 6 and 12 months prior. RESULTS: Fourteen of 161 individuals developed fluid without symptoms. PWS over fluid areas at detection was reduced compared with 6 (difference -2.04 dB, P < 0.001) and 12 months (-2.27 dB, P < 0.001) prior. PWS over fluid areas was reduced compared with perifluid areas (difference -1.02 dB, P = 0.03), peripheral areas (-1.51 dB, P < 0.001), nonprogressed fellow eyes (-1.49 dB, P = 0.006), and nonprogressed age-matched intermediate AMD eyes (-2.29 dB, P = 0.001). No difference in BCVA was observed in eyes developing fluid compared to eyes that do not develop fluid (P = 0.76). CONCLUSIONS: Retinal areas with fluid on SD-OCT had a corresponding reduction in retinal sensitivity at the time of fluid detection compared with 6 and 12 months prior, in asymptomatic intermediate AMD without change in BCVA. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: Development of self-monitoring tools to detect changes in retinal sensitivity may be helpful for early detection of retinal fluid suggestive of progression to neovascular AMD before acuity is affected.
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    Properties of the Impact of Vision Impairment and Night Vision Questionnaires Among People With Intermediate Age-Related Macular Degeneration
    McGuinness, MB ; Finger, RP ; Wu, Z ; Luu, CD ; Chen, FK ; Arnold, JJ ; Chakravarthy, U ; Heriot, WJ ; Runciman, J ; Guymer, RH (ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC, 2019-09)
    PURPOSE: To explore the psychometric properties of the Impact of Vision Impairment (IVI-28) and Night Vision Questionnaires (NVQ-10) among people with intermediate age-related macular degeneration (iAMD). METHODS: Baseline responses were collected from 288 participants (aged 50-88 years, 74% female) in the Laser intervention in Early stages of Age-related macular Degeneration (LEAD) study in Australia and Northern Ireland. Psychometric properties (discrimination, ordering of thresholds, person separation, item miss-fit, and differential item functioning according to sex) were explored using grouped rating scale and partial credit models. Spearman's correlation was estimated to assess the association with measures of visual function (mean mesopic microperimetric sensitivity, best-corrected visual acuity, low-luminance visual acuity, and low-luminance deficit). The psychometric properties were then explored following recalibration of the instruments. RESULTS: In this homogenous population, ceiling effects caused by relatively high levels of functional vision were evident for both instruments. The IVI-28 and NVQ-10 displayed suboptimal discrimination between levels of functional vision in iAMD and poor targeting among people with iAMD. The correlation between ability scores and measures of visual function was mild. In general, the NVQ-10 showed superior psychometric properties to the IVI-28 among these participants. No significant improvement in reliability could be gained following recalibration. CONCLUSIONS: Both instruments were designed for populations with more severe visual loss and poorly discriminate in this cohort of iAMD. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: New instruments that can capture the subtle changes in functional vision that occur early in AMD are required to aid evaluation of emerging interventions for iAMD.
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    Home Monitoring of Retinal Sensitivity on a Tablet Device in Intermediate Age-Related Macular Degeneration
    Adams, M ; Ho, CYD ; Baglin, E ; Sharangan, P ; Wu, Z ; Lawson, DJ ; Luu, CD ; Turpin, A ; McKendrick, AM ; Guymer, RH (ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC, 2018-09)
    PURPOSE: We determine the feasibility of using a home-based tablet device to monitor retinal sensitivity (RS) in intermediate age-related macular degeneration (iAMD), the benefits of weekly reminders, and the comparison with clinic-based results. METHODS: A customized test for tablets was designed to measure RS (within central 2°) in individuals with iAMD at weekly intervals in their home, with remote data collection. Half of the participants were randomized to receive weekly test reminders. Clinic-based microperimetric macular sensitivity results were compared to tablet results. Participation rates were analyzed at 2 months. RESULTS: Of 38 participants (mean age, 70.3 years) with iAMD enrolled in the study, 21 (55%) were using the tablet-based test at 2 months. Common reasons for inactivity were noncompatible devices (41.1%) or other technology access issues (35.3%). Participants with weekly reminders completed tests more regularly (6.6 ± 3.9 vs. 8.7 ± 4.1 days, P = 0.01), but weekly reminders showed no effect on participation rates (P = 0.69). Mean RS from the tablet device (25.03 ± 2.41 dB) was not significantly different from the clinic-based microperimetry performance (25.21 ± 2.20 dB; P = 0.58). CONCLUSIONS: Regular monitoring of retinal function on a tablet device in a home setting in individuals with iAMD is feasible with results comparable to those of clinic-based microperimetry. Weekly reminders resulted in more frequent testing. Seamless ability to access technology will be important for higher participation rates. TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE: The use of home-monitoring on a tablet-device is promising, but adequate support for an older cohort to take up technology is required if such a tool is to be useful for long-term home monitoring.
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    Progress in the clinical development and utilization of vision prostheses: an update
    Brandli, A ; Luu, CD ; Guymer, RH ; Ayton, LN (DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD, 2016)
    Vision prostheses, or "bionic eyes", are implantable medical bionic devices with the potential to restore rudimentary sight to people with profound vision loss or blindness. In the past two decades, this field has rapidly progressed, and there are now two commercially available retinal prostheses in the US and Europe, and a number of next-generation devices in development. This review provides an update on the development of these devices and a discussion on the future directions for the field.