Screening for ophthalmic disease in older subjects using visual acuity and contrast sensitivity. 1998

R L Woods, and S J Tregear, and R A Mitchell
Department of Vision Sciences, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland.

OBJECTIVE Despite early interest in contrast sensitivity as a screening test for ophthalmic disease, most published opinion suggests that there is no benefit over conventional measurement of visual acuity. Taking a primary care perspective of screening, the authors evaluated the ability to discriminate those with any diagnosed ophthalmic disease in a large sample representative of the general population. METHODS Retrospective analysis of a clinical, cross-sectional survey. Snellen visual acuity, contrast sensitivity (Arden plates, American Optical contrast sensitivity test), and ophthalmic diagnosis were reported previously. METHODS A sample of 3283 subjects, all aged at least 50 years, were selected randomly from residents of a health district in Sydney, Australia. Ophthalmologic diagnosis (ophthalmic disease presence/absence) had been confirmed for 2522 of these subjects. METHODS Signal detection techniques (the receiver-operating characteristics function [ROC], quality ROC [QROC], and weighted kappa coefficient of association [kappa(r)]) were used to evaluate test discriminability. RESULTS Because analyses of right and left eyes were almost identical, only right eye results are presented. Advantages of kappa(r) over ROC were shown. Discrimination of those with diagnosed ophthalmic disease from those without ophthalmic disease was best with Arden plate 7 (kappa0.5 = 0.93) and was better than distance Snellen visual acuity (kappa0.5 = 0.59). Arden plate 7 (6.4 cyc/deg) correctly assigned 96% of subjects at its optimal pass-fail criterion. CONCLUSIONS In the primary care setting, a person older than 50 years of age with reduced contrast sensitivity, as determined by Arden plate 7, requires extra care in subsequent examinations because this person is likely to have an ophthalmic disease.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D003430 Cross-Sectional Studies Studies in which the presence or absence of disease or other health-related variables are determined in each member of the study population or in a representative sample at one particular time. This contrasts with LONGITUDINAL STUDIES which are followed over a period of time. Disease Frequency Surveys,Prevalence Studies,Analysis, Cross-Sectional,Cross Sectional Analysis,Cross-Sectional Survey,Surveys, Disease Frequency,Analyses, Cross Sectional,Analyses, Cross-Sectional,Analysis, Cross Sectional,Cross Sectional Analyses,Cross Sectional Studies,Cross Sectional Survey,Cross-Sectional Analyses,Cross-Sectional Analysis,Cross-Sectional Study,Cross-Sectional Surveys,Disease Frequency Survey,Prevalence Study,Studies, Cross-Sectional,Studies, Prevalence,Study, Cross-Sectional,Study, Prevalence,Survey, Cross-Sectional,Survey, Disease Frequency,Surveys, Cross-Sectional
D005128 Eye Diseases Diseases affecting the eye. Eye Disorders,Eye Disease,Eye Disorder
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000368 Aged A person 65 years of age or older. For a person older than 79 years, AGED, 80 AND OVER is available. Elderly
D000375 Aging The gradual irreversible changes in structure and function of an organism that occur as a result of the passage of time. Senescence,Aging, Biological,Biological Aging
D012189 Retrospective Studies Studies used to test etiologic hypotheses in which inferences about an exposure to putative causal factors are derived from data relating to characteristics of persons under study or to events or experiences in their past. The essential feature is that some of the persons under study have the disease or outcome of interest and their characteristics are compared with those of unaffected persons. Retrospective Study,Studies, Retrospective,Study, Retrospective
D012372 ROC Curve A graphic means for assessing the ability of a screening test to discriminate between healthy and diseased persons; may also be used in other studies, e.g., distinguishing stimuli responses as to a faint stimuli or nonstimuli. ROC Analysis,Receiver Operating Characteristic,Analysis, ROC,Analyses, ROC,Characteristic, Receiver Operating,Characteristics, Receiver Operating,Curve, ROC,Curves, ROC,ROC Analyses,ROC Curves,Receiver Operating Characteristics

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