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Comparison of disease severity in glaucoma patients identified by screening in the 1990s and in routine clinical care in the 2010s in Sweden

Bengtsson, B. LU ; Villalba, C. LU ; Peters, D. LU and Aspberg, J. LU orcid (2023) In Acta Ophthalmologica p.1-8
Abstract
Background and Purpose
In a previous study comparing the amount of visual field damage at presentation in patients having open-angle glaucoma (OAG) identified through screening and in patients diagnosed in routine clinical practice in the 1990s, the damage was considerably worse in the clinically diagnosed patients. In the present study we compare visual field damage at presentation in the same 402 screened patients with that seen in 281 newly detected previously untreated patients clinically diagnosed in the 2010s.

Methods
The perimetric visual field index mean deviation (MD) was compared in the two groups of patients.

Results
In the clinical patients diagnosed with bilateral visual field damage the median MD... (More)
Background and Purpose
In a previous study comparing the amount of visual field damage at presentation in patients having open-angle glaucoma (OAG) identified through screening and in patients diagnosed in routine clinical practice in the 1990s, the damage was considerably worse in the clinically diagnosed patients. In the present study we compare visual field damage at presentation in the same 402 screened patients with that seen in 281 newly detected previously untreated patients clinically diagnosed in the 2010s.

Methods
The perimetric visual field index mean deviation (MD) was compared in the two groups of patients.

Results
In the clinical patients diagnosed with bilateral visual field damage the median MD was −5.1 dB in the better eye and −13.0 dB in the worse eye. In the screened patients the median MD in the better eye was −6.5 dB and −11.5 dB in the worse eye. The differences between the clinical and screened patients were non-significant, p = 0.28 and p = 0.67 respectively. More clinical patients had severe visual field loss, defined as MD less than −20 dB, in the worse eye than in the screened patients, 18.5% versus 12.7% respectively, p = 0.037.

Conclusion
The visual field damage at presentation in clinically diagnosed OAG patients has improved in the past 20 years, but the proportion of patients with severe visual field loss in at least one eye, almost 20%, is still unacceptably high considering that severe visual field damage at presentation is the most important risk factor for later development of glaucoma blindness. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
in
Acta Ophthalmologica
pages
1 - 8
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • pmid:37786298
  • scopus:85173543336
ISSN
1755-3768
DOI
10.1111/aos.15777
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a6a20d12-6103-4fea-bed7-1e543265bf6c
date added to LUP
2023-10-03 14:03:37
date last changed
2023-12-15 04:02:09
@article{a6a20d12-6103-4fea-bed7-1e543265bf6c,
  abstract     = {{Background and Purpose<br/>In a previous study comparing the amount of visual field damage at presentation in patients having open-angle glaucoma (OAG) identified through screening and in patients diagnosed in routine clinical practice in the 1990s, the damage was considerably worse in the clinically diagnosed patients. In the present study we compare visual field damage at presentation in the same 402 screened patients with that seen in 281 newly detected previously untreated patients clinically diagnosed in the 2010s.<br/><br/>Methods<br/>The perimetric visual field index mean deviation (MD) was compared in the two groups of patients.<br/><br/>Results<br/>In the clinical patients diagnosed with bilateral visual field damage the median MD was −5.1 dB in the better eye and −13.0 dB in the worse eye. In the screened patients the median MD in the better eye was −6.5 dB and −11.5 dB in the worse eye. The differences between the clinical and screened patients were non-significant, p = 0.28 and p = 0.67 respectively. More clinical patients had severe visual field loss, defined as MD less than −20 dB, in the worse eye than in the screened patients, 18.5% versus 12.7% respectively, p = 0.037.<br/><br/>Conclusion<br/>The visual field damage at presentation in clinically diagnosed OAG patients has improved in the past 20 years, but the proportion of patients with severe visual field loss in at least one eye, almost 20%, is still unacceptably high considering that severe visual field damage at presentation is the most important risk factor for later development of glaucoma blindness.}},
  author       = {{Bengtsson, B. and Villalba, C. and Peters, D. and Aspberg, J.}},
  issn         = {{1755-3768}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  pages        = {{1--8}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Acta Ophthalmologica}},
  title        = {{Comparison of disease severity in glaucoma patients identified by screening in the 1990s and in routine clinical care in the 2010s in Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/aos.15777}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/aos.15777}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}