1. Evaluation of the Cirrus High-Definition OCT Normative Database Probability Codes in a Black American Population
- Author
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Joan M. O'Brien, Judy J Chen, Lilian Chan, Roy Lee, Rebecca Salowe, Victoria Addis, Kendall Goodyear, Maureen G. Maguire, Prithvi S. Sankar, Eydie Miller-Ellis, Maxwell Pistilli, and Qi N. Cui
- Subjects
Percentile ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Glaucoma ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Standard deviation ,Cohort ,Linear regression ,medicine ,Optometry ,Cirrus ,Observational study ,sense organs ,business ,Color code - Abstract
Purpose Race-adjusted interpretation of data from Cirrus high-definition OCT (HD-OCT) devices is not standard practice. The aim of this study is to evaluate differences in peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness between healthy Black Americans and the Cirrus HD-OCT normative database. Design This is a cross-sectional observational study using control patients recruited from the greater Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, area. Participants A total of 466 eyes were included in this study. Subjects were retrospectively identified from the control cohort of the Primary Open-Angle African American Glaucoma Genetics (POAAGG) study. Methods Using an age-stratified or linear regression method, we reclassified white-green-yellow-red color probability codes for RNFL thicknesses by quadrant. Main Outcome Measures The distribution of reclassified color codes was compared with the expected 5%-90%-4%-1% percentiles and to the original color codes by the Cirrus machine. Results Average RNFL thickness in the POAAGG control cohort was thinner than in the Cirrus normative database in all except the nasal quadrant. The original color codes of the POAAGG cohort did not fall into the expected distributions, with more RNFL measurements assigned as white and red codes than expected (9.5% and 1.7%) and fewer measurements assigned as green and yellow codes than expected (85.3% and 3.5%) (P Conclusions Results further establish the presence of structural differences in the RNFL of Black American patients. Color code reclassification suggests that the existing Cirrus database may not be accurately evaluating glaucomatous nerves in patients of African descent. This study addresses an unmet need to assess Cirrus HD-OCT color probability codes in a Black American population.
- Published
- 2022
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