419 results on '"Holmes JM"'
Search Results
2. Reply
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Holmes Jm, Jae Ho Jung, and Leske Da
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Ophthalmology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Medial rectus muscle ,Medicine ,Consecutive exotropia ,business - Published
- 2016
3. Jaundice in Leuco-erythroblastic Anaemia
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Holmes Jm and McCall Aj
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,Addresses and Papers ,General Medicine ,Jaundice ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Dermatology ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2010
4. Amblyopia treatment trials
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HOLMES, JM, primary
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- 2014
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5. Murray Valley encephalomyelitis in a horse
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Holmes, JM, primary, Gilkerson, JR, additional, El Hage, CM, additional, Slocombe, RF, additional, and Muurlink, MA, additional
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- 2012
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6. Methods for quantifying diplopia
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HOLMES, JM, primary, HATT, SR, additional, LESKE, DA, additional, and ADAMS, WE, additional
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- 2007
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7. Polyclonal Activation of the Murine Immune-system By An Antibody To Igd .11. Contribution of Membrane Igd Cross-linking To the Generation of An Invivo Polyclonal Antibody-response
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UCL - MD/MIGE - Département de microbiologie, d'immunologie et de génétique, Goroff, DK., Holmes, JM., Bazin, Hervé, Nisol, Françoise, Finkelman, FD., UCL - MD/MIGE - Département de microbiologie, d'immunologie et de génétique, Goroff, DK., Holmes, JM., Bazin, Hervé, Nisol, Françoise, and Finkelman, FD.
- Abstract
The injection of mice with a foreign, polyclonal antibody to IgD a polyclonal IgG1 response; 2) the cross-linking of B cell membrane Ig, their cell membrane (m) IgD; 2) B cell processing and presentation of the bound anti-IgD antibody to T cells; 3) activation of these T cells; and 4) T-dependent stimulation of B cell differentiation into IgG1 secreting cells. To determine whether the cross-linking of B cell membrane IgD and/or the resulting B cell activation that follows contribute to the generation of the polyclonal IgG1 response, we examined the abilities of three sets of anti-delta mAb or mAb fragments to stimulate polyclonal IgG1 production. Within each set mAb were matched for species and Ig isotypic determinants, but differed in avidity for IgD or in ability to cross-link IgD. In addition, experiments were performed to determine whether the anti-delta mAb had to be foreign to the immunized mouse to stimulate an IgG1 response. Results of these experiments indicate that: 1) recognition of the injected anti-delta antibody as foreign is required for the induction of a polyclonal IgG1 response; 2) the cross-linking of B cell membrane Ig, which directly activates B cells, can contribute considerably to the generation of in vivo IgG1 production; and 3) that even relatively weak cross-linking of membrane Ig by ligands that bind it with low avidity can make this contribution.
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- 1991
8. 5-Substituted 3-thiophenesulfonamides as carbonic anhydrase inhibitors
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Chow, K, primary, Lai, R, additional, Holmes, JM, additional, Wijono, M, additional, Wheeler, LA, additional, and Garst, ME, additional
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- 1996
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9. Development of an evidence-based protocol for reduction of indwelling urinary catheter usage.
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Robinson S, Allen L, Barnes MR, Berry TA, Foster TA, Friedrich LA, Holmes JM, Mercer S, Plunkett D, Vollmer CM, and Weitzel T
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- 2007
10. Amblyopia.
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Holmes JM and Clarke MP
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- 2006
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11. Effect of needle size on success of transarterial axillary block.
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English LA, Holmes JM, Burkard JF, Vacchiano CA, Shin A, Pellegrini J, and Maye JP
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The transarterial approach to brachial plexus block is a well-established method of producing anesthesia of the upper extremity. However, it is associated with a failure rate of 20% to 30%. Failure may be secondary to the common use of a relatively long needle, which can penetrate the posterior wall of the sheath and result in inadvertent injection of the local anesthetic into the surrounding tissue. The purpose of this investigation was to compare success rates following transarterial brachial plexus block with a standard 22-gauge, 1 1/2-in, a bevel needle or a 26-gauge, 1/2-in needle.We enrolled 98 subjects scheduled for elective surgery at or below the elbow and randomized them into 2 groups. The control group received a transarterial axillary block with a standard 22-gauge, 1 1/2-in, 8 bevel needle, and the experimental group received a transarterial axillary block with a 26-gauge,1/2-in needle. Success was defined as no discomfort at the time of incision. Success rates were compared using a chi 2 test, and a P value of less than .05 was considered significant. The overall success rate was significantly higher with the 26-gauge,1/2-in needle (42/48(88% )) than with the 22-gauge, 1 1/2-in needle (39/49 (69%; P = .035). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
12. Congenital dacryocystocele associated with intranasal cysts: diagnosis and management.
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Shashy RG, Durairaj V, Holmes JM, Hohberger GG, Thompson DM, and Kasperbauer JL
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- 2003
13. Age-appropriate HIV prevention messages for older adults: findings from focus groups in New York State.
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Klein SJ, Nokes KM, Devore BS, Holmes JM, Wheeler DP, and St. Hilaire MB
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The Emerging Issues Committee of the New York State HIV Prevention Planning Group identified that prevention messages were not including persons 50 and older and that 15 percent of the newly reported AIDS cases in 1997 in New York were in this age group. Recognizing that there may be unique needs in targeting prevention messages for this age group, a consultant conducted five focus groups throughout the state to speak with people to determine what they identified as unique themes related to HIV prevention for this age group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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14. Case of Acute Dermatomyositis
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Holmes Jm
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Multimedia ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,MEDLINE ,Articles ,General Medicine ,Dermatomyositis ,medicine.disease ,computer.software_genre ,World Wide Web ,medicine ,Humans ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business ,computer ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1948
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15. A MYOPATHY PRESENTING IN ADULT LIFE WITH FEATURES SUGGESTIVE OF GLYCOGEN STORAGE DISEASE
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Holmes Jm, Houghton Cr, and A.L. Woolf
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Adult life ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Glycogen storage disease ,Surgery ,Articles ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Bioinformatics ,business ,medicine.disease ,Myopathy - Published
- 1960
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16. Pellagra: Changes in the Spinal Cord
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Holmes Jm and J. G. Greenfield
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medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Pellagra ,General Engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,Articles ,General Medicine ,business ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease ,Spinal cord ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1939
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17. Neurological Complications in Atypical Pneumonia
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Holmes Jm
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Articles ,Pneumonia ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Atypical pneumonia ,Internal medicine ,Pneumonia, Mycoplasma ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,Humans ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Medicine ,Mycoplasma Infections ,Lung Diseases, Interstitial ,business ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1947
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18. Cerebral Manifestations of Vitamin-B12 Deficiency*
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Holmes Jm
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Brain Diseases ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Brain ,Vitamin B 12 Deficiency ,General Medicine ,Articles ,Vitamins ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Humans ,Vitamin B12 ,business ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1956
19. Nutritional Oedema in a Vegetarian
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Holmes Jm
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,General Medicine ,Articles ,Blood serum ,Blood chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,Correspondence ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 1944
20. Thyrotropin receptors in thyroid plasma membranes. Characteristics of thyrotropin binding and solubilization of thyrotropin receptor activity by tryptic digestion
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Tate, RL, primary, Schwartz, HI, additional, Holmes, JM, additional, and Kohn, LD, additional
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- 1975
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21. Characteristics of a solubilized thyrotropin receptor from bovine thyroid plasma membranes
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Tate, RL, primary, Holmes, JM, additional, Kohn, LD, additional, and Winand, RJ, additional
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- 1975
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22. Left Temporal Cholesteatoma
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Holmes Jm
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business.industry ,Medicine ,Cholesteatoma ,business ,medicine.disease ,Data science - Published
- 1935
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23. Doing it better. To cath or not to cath?
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Weitzel T, Vollmer CM, Plunkett D, Mercer S, Holmes JM, Friedrich LA, Foster TA, Berry TA, Barnes MR, Allen L, and Robinson S
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- 2008
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24. Continuous SCVO2 monitoring in sepsis: end the confusion.
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Li N, McArdle T, Holmes JM, and Watpool I
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- 2006
25. Test-retest reliability of health-related quality-of-life questionnaires in adults with strabismus.
- Author
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Leske DA, Hatt SR, Holmes JM, Leske, David A, Hatt, Sarah R, and Holmes, Jonathan M
- Abstract
Purpose: To report the test-retest variability of two health-related quality-of-life instruments: the new Adult Strabismus 20 (AS-20) and the National Eye Institute 25-item Visual Function Questionnaire (NEI VFQ-25), in adults with strabismus.Design: Prospective case series.Methods: Fifty-five adult patients in a clinical practice with stable strabismus completed the AS-20 and the NEI VFQ-25 at 2 visits, without intervening treatment. Questionnaires were completed the second time either at a subsequent office visit, immediately before surgery, or by mail. Intraclass correlation coefficients were calculated. Ninety-five percent limits of agreement and 95% confidence intervals around the 95% limits of agreement also were calculated.Results: There was excellent agreement of overall questionnaire scores for the AS-20 (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.92) and NEI VFQ-25 (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.94). The 95% limits of agreement for overall scores were 14.3 points (95% confidence interval, 10.9 to 17.7) for the AS-20 and 11.1 points (95% confidence interval, 8.5 to 13.8) for the NEI VFQ-25. The lower test-retest variability of the VFQ-25 seemed to be partly the result of ceiling effects with many scores at the normal end of the range.Conclusions: The new AS-20 and the NEI VFQ-25 show excellent test-retest reliability in adults with strabismus. Change exceeding 95% limits of agreement (14 points on the AS-20 and 11 points on the VFQ-25) is indicative of real change in an individual patient. The AS-20 may be more useful than the VFQ-25 because it is less prone to ceiling effects in adults with strabismus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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26. Effect of ocular alignment on emmetropization in children <10 years with amblyopia.
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Kulp MT, Foster NC, Holmes JM, Kraker RT, Melia BM, Repka MX, Tien DR, Pediatric Eye Disease Investigator Group, Kulp, Marjean T, Foster, Nicole C, Holmes, Jonathan M, Kraker, Raymond T, Melia, B Michele, Repka, Michael X, and Tien, D Robbins
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine whether change in refractive error is associated with ocular alignment in 105 children 3 to <7 years of age who previously participated in a randomized trial comparing atropine and patching for moderate amblyopia.Design: Prospective cohort study.Methods: One hundred five children 3 to <7 years of age previously participated in a randomized trial comparing atropine with patching for moderate amblyopia. Cycloplegic refraction was measured at baseline and 10 years of age. Ocular alignment at baseline was categorized as orthotropic, microtropic (1-8 Δ horizontal tropia), or heterotropic (>8 Δ horizontal tropia). Multivariate regression models evaluated whether change in spherical equivalent refractive error was associated with alignment category, after adjusting for age, baseline spherical equivalent refractive error, and type of amblyopia treatment.Results: Between enrollment and the age 10-year examination, there was a decrease in spherical equivalent refractive error from hyperopia to less hyperopia (amblyopic eye: -0.65 diopter, 95% CI -0.85, -0.46; fellow eye: -0.39 diopter, 95% CI -0.58, -0.20). A greater decrease in amblyopic eye refractive error was associated with better ocular alignment category (P = .004), with the greatest decrease occurring in orthotropic patients. There was no relationship between ocular alignment category and change in fellow-eye refractive error.Conclusions: Among children treated for anisometropic, strabismic, or combined mechanism amblyopia, there is a decrease in amblyopic eye spherical equivalent refractive error to less hyperopia after controlling for baseline refractive error. This negative shift toward emmetropia is associated with ocular alignment, which supports the suggestion that better motor and sensory fusion promote emmetropization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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27. Accurate patient alignment without unnecessary imaging using patient-specific 3D CT images synthesized from 2D kV images.
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Ding Y, Holmes JM, Feng H, Li B, McGee LA, Rwigema JM, Vora SA, Wong WW, Ma DJ, Foote RL, Patel SH, and Liu W
- Abstract
Background: In radiotherapy, 2D orthogonally projected kV images are used for patient alignment when 3D-on-board imaging (OBI) is unavailable. However, tumor visibility is constrained due to the projection of patient's anatomy onto a 2D plane, potentially leading to substantial setup errors. In treatment room with 3D-OBI such as cone beam CT (CBCT), the field of view (FOV) of CBCT is limited with unnecessarily high imaging dose. A solution to this dilemma is to reconstruct 3D CT from kV images obtained at the treatment position., Methods: We propose a dual-models framework built with hierarchical ViT blocks. Unlike a proof-of-concept approach, our framework considers kV images acquired by 2D imaging devices in the treatment room as the solo input and can synthesize accurate, full-size 3D CT within milliseconds., Results: We demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed approach on 10 patients with head and neck (H&N) cancer using image quality (MAE: < 45HU), dosimetric accuracy (Gamma passing rate ((2%/2 mm/10%): > 97%) and patient position uncertainty (shift error: < 0.4 mm)., Conclusions: The proposed framework can generate accurate 3D CT faithfully mirroring patient position effectively, thus substantially improving patient setup accuracy, keeping imaging dose minimal, and maintaining treatment veracity., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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28. Baseline factors associated with myopia progression and axial elongation over 30 months in children 5 to 12 years of age.
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Weise KK, Repka MX, Zhu Y, Manny RE, Raghuram A, Chandler DL, Summers AI, Lee KA, Kehler LAF, Pang Y, Allen MS, Anderson HA, Erzurum SA, Golden RP, Koutnik CA, Kuo AF, Lenhart PD, Mokka PL, Petersen DB, Ticho BH, Wiecek EK, Yin H, Beaulieu WT, Kraker RT, Holmes JM, and Cotter SA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Child, Preschool, Follow-Up Studies, Atropine therapeutic use, Mydriatics therapeutic use, Mydriatics administration & dosage, Double-Blind Method, Ophthalmic Solutions, Time Factors, Disease Progression, Axial Length, Eye, Myopia physiopathology, Refraction, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to identify baseline factors associated with greater myopia progression and axial elongation in children with myopia., Methods: This study performed a post hoc analysis of data from a 30-month randomized trial of atropine 0.01% versus placebo in children 5 to <13 years old with baseline spherical equivalent refractive error (SER) of -1.00 to -6.00 D, astigmatism of ≤1.50 D, and anisometropia of <1.00 D SER. Data from atropine 0.01% and placebo groups were pooled given outcomes were similar. Baseline factors of age, SER, axial length, race, sex, parental myopia, and iris color were evaluated for association with changes in SER and with changes in axial length at 30 months (24 months on treatment and then 6 months off) using backward model selection., Results: Among 187 randomized participants, 175 (94%) completed 30 months of follow-up. The mean change in SER was greater among younger children (-0.19 D per 1 year younger; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.25 to -0.14 D; p<0.001) and children with higher myopia (-0.14 D per 1 D more myopia at baseline; 95% CI, -0.23 to -0.05 D; p=0.002). The mean change in axial length was also greater among younger children (0.13 mm per 1 year younger; 95% CI, 0.10 to 0.15 mm; p<0.001) and children with higher baseline myopia (0.04 mm per 1 D more myopia; 95% CI, 0.002 to 0.08; p=0.04)., Conclusions: Younger children with higher myopia had greater myopic progression and axial elongation over 30 months than older children with lower myopia. Developing effective treatments to slow the faster myopic progression in younger children should be a target of further research., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Disclosure: None of the authors have reported a financial conflict of interest. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funding organizations., (Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Optometry.)
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- 2024
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29. Complications, Visual Acuity, and Refractive Error 3 Years after Secondary Intraocular Lens Implantation for Pediatric Aphakia.
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Wang S, Repka MX, Sutherland DR, Hatt SR, Traboulsi EI, Lambert SR, Melia BM, Kraker RT, Holmes JM, and Cotter SA
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- Humans, Child, Preschool, Female, Male, Child, Incidence, Follow-Up Studies, Infant, Cataract Extraction adverse effects, Registries, Refraction, Ocular physiology, Reoperation, Cataract congenital, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Visual Acuity physiology, Lens Implantation, Intraocular, Postoperative Complications, Aphakia, Postcataract physiopathology, Aphakia, Postcataract surgery, Refractive Errors physiopathology, Refractive Errors etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To report the cumulative incidence of complications and to describe refractive error and visual acuity (VA) outcomes in children undergoing secondary intraocular lens (IOL) implantation after previous surgery for nontraumatic cataract., Design: Pediatric cataract registry., Participants: Eighty children (108 eyes: 60 bilateral, 48 unilateral) undergoing lensectomy at younger than 13 years of age., Methods: Annual data collection from medical record review through 5 years after lensectomy., Main Outcome Measures: Cumulative incidence of newly emergent complications after secondary IOL implantation; refractive error and VA by 5 years after lensectomy., Results: Median follow-up after secondary IOL implantation was 2.7 years (interquartile range [IQR], 0.8-3.3 years; range, 0.6-5.0 years) for bilateral and 2.1 years (range, 0.5-6.4 years) for unilateral cases. A common complication after secondary IOL implantation was a glaucoma-related adverse event (GRAE; glaucoma or glaucoma suspect); the cumulative incidence was 17% (95% confidence interval [CI], 3%-29%) in bilateral cases and 12% (95% CI, 0%-23%) in unilateral cases. The cumulative incidence of surgery for visual axis opacification was 2% (95% CI, 0%-7%) for bilateral cases and 4% (95% CI, 0%-10%) for unilateral cases. The median prediction error within 90 days of implantation was 0.88 diopter (D; IQR, -0.50 to +3.00 D) less hyperopic than intended among 21 eyes for bilateral cases and 1.50 D (IQR, -0.25 to +2.38 D) less among 19 unilateral cases. The median spherical equivalent refractive error at 5 years (at a median of 5.1 years of age) in eyes receiving a secondary IOL was +0.50 D (IQR, -2.38 to +2.94 D) for 48 bilateral cases and +0.06 D (IQR, -2.25 to +0.75 D) for 22 unilateral cases. Median monocular VA at 5 years was 20/63 (IQR, 20/50-20/100) for bilateral cases (n = 42) and 20/400 (IQR, 20/160-20/800) for unilateral cases (n = 33)., Conclusions: Eyes with secondary IOL implantation have a risk of developing new GRAEs. Five years after lensectomy (approximately 2.5 years after secondary IOL implantation), the average refractive error was less hyperopic than desired given the anticipated further myopic shift before refraction stabilizes., Financial Disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article., (Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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30. Myopic Shift over 5 Years after Pediatric Lensectomy with Primary Intraocular Lens Implantation.
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de Alba Campomanes AG, Repka MX, Hatt SR, Sutherland DR, Leske DA, Morrison DG, Fallaha N, Melia BM, Kraker RT, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Abstract
Purpose: To report the change in refractive error over 5 years after primary intraocular lens (IOL) placement by age at surgery and to identify factors associated with the change in refractive error after 5 years., Design: Prospective observational study at 61 pediatric eye care practices., Participants: One hundred eighty-six eyes of 152 children undergoing primary IOL implantation before 13 years of age for nontraumatic cataract., Interventions: Cataract surgery with primary IOL placement., Main Outcome Measures: Five-year change in refractive error (spherical equivalent) by age at surgery and by immediate postoperative myopia versus emmetropia or hyperopia., Results: Mean spherical equivalent myopic shift was -5.99 diopters (D; 95% confidence interval [CI], -7.64 to -4.34 D) when surgery was performed at 0 to younger than 1 year of age (n = 13), -3.53 D (-4.57 to -2.48 D) at 1 to younger than 2.5 years of age (n = 28), -1.91 D (-2.55 to -1.26 D) at 2.5 to younger than 4 years of age (n = 36), -2.04 D -2.60 to -1.49 D) at 4 to younger than 7 years of age (n = 60), and -0.83 D (-1.27 to -0.40 D) at 7 to younger than 13 years of age (n = 49; P < 0.01 for each comparison with the oldest group). Variability of myopic shift also decreased with increasing age (P < 0.01). In eyes of children 4 to younger than 13 years of age (small sample size precluded analysis of children younger than 4 years), significantly less mean change in refractive error was found over 5 years in eyes with myopia immediately after surgery (-0.69 D; 95% CI, -1.48 to 0.10 D; n = 27) than eyes with emmetropia or hyperopia immediately after surgery (-1.70 D; 95% CI, -2.10 to -1.31 D, n = 82; difference, -1.01 D [95% CI, -1.89 to -0.14 D]; P = 0.03)., Conclusions: In this large, prospective cohort study of children younger than 13 years undergoing cataract surgery with primary IOL placement, greater and more variable myopic shift was found in children undergoing surgery at a younger age. Our finding of less myopic shift over 5 years in eyes with unintended immediate postoperative myopia deserves further study to guide IOL power selection more accurately., Financial Disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article., (Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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31. Evaluating Baseline Data in Clinical Trials-Can I Apply the Results?
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Holmes JM
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- Humans, Research Design standards, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Clinical Trials as Topic standards
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- 2024
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32. Doses of medial rectus muscle recessions for divergence insufficiency-type esotropia.
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Miller AM, Holmes JM, Wu R, Kraker RT, Crouch ER, Lee KA, Del Monte MA, Marsh JD, Kraus CL, Wallace DK, Colburn JD, Kemp PS, and Cotter SA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Suture Techniques, Diplopia physiopathology, Diplopia surgery, Adolescent, Treatment Outcome, Oculomotor Muscles surgery, Oculomotor Muscles physiopathology, Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures methods, Esotropia surgery, Esotropia physiopathology, Vision, Binocular physiology
- Abstract
We evaluated whether doses of bilateral medial rectus recessions greater than Parks's tables yielded superior outcomes for adult-onset divergence insufficiency. Forty-two patients underwent bilateral medial rectus recessions. Dose was analyzed as the average total per muscle (surgery + suture adjustment if performed) and compared with the standard dose tables (based on preoperative distance esodeviation), as difference between dose performed and dose indicated by Parks's tables. Each participant was classified as having received either Parks's dose (within 0.5 mm) or a dose greater than Parks's dose. Success was defined as "rarely" or "never" diplopia in distance straight-ahead gaze and reading. For patients classified as success, the mean difference between actual surgical dose performed and Parks's dose was calculated. Success was 91% (29/32) in those receiving greater than Parks's dose versus 67% (6/9) with Parks's dose (difference = 24%; 95% CI, -5% to 60%). The mean surgical dose was 1.0 mm greater than Parks's tables for the 35 successes (at 10 weeks) versus 0.7 mm greater for the 6 failures (difference = 0.4 mm; 95% CI, -0.2 to 0.9). For medial rectus recessions in adult-onset divergence insufficiency-type esotropia, a surgical dose 1 mm greater than Parks's tables, for each muscle, is a reasonable strategy., (Copyright © 2024 American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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33. Refractive Error Change and Overminus Lens Therapy for Childhood Intermittent Exotropia.
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Chen AM, Erzurum SA, Chandler DL, Hercinovic A, Wu R, Vricella M, Waters AL, Ticho BH, Erickson JW, Han S, McDowell PS, Li Z, Kraker RT, Holmes JM, and Cotter SA
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Child, Follow-Up Studies, Myopia physiopathology, Myopia therapy, Retinoscopy, Exotropia physiopathology, Exotropia therapy, Eyeglasses, Refraction, Ocular physiology, Visual Acuity physiology
- Abstract
Importance: Increased myopic shift was found to be associated with 1 year of overminus spectacle treatment for children with intermittent exotropia (IXT). Persistence of myopic shift after discontinuing overminus spectacles is unknown., Objective: To compare refractive error change over 3 years in children with IXT originally treated with overminus vs nonoverminus spectacles., Design, Setting, and Participants: This study was an 18-month extension of the Trial of Overminus Spectacle Therapy for Intermittent Exotropia cohort, which previously randomized children aged 3 to 10 years with IXT and baseline spherical equivalent refractive error (SER) between -6.00 diopters (D) and 1.00 D to overminus spectacles (-2.50 D for 12 months, -1.25 D for 3 months, and nonoverminus for 3 months) or nonoverminus spectacles. Children were recruited from 56 sites from July 2010 to February 2022. Data were analyzed from February 2022 to January 2024., Interventions: After trial completion at 18 months, participants were followed up at 24 and 36 months. Treatment was at investigator discretion from 18 to 36 months., Main Outcomes and Measures: Change in SER (cycloplegic retinoscopy) from baseline to 36 months., Results: Of 386 children in the Trial of Overminus Spectacle Therapy for Intermittent Exotropia, 223 (57.8%) consented to 18 months of additional follow-up, including 124 of 196 (63.3%) in the overminus treatment group and 99 of 190 (52.1%) in the nonoverminus treatment group. Of 205 children who completed 36-month follow-up, 116 (56.6%) were female, and the mean (SD) age at randomization was 6.2 (2.1) years. Mean (SD) SER change from baseline to 36 months was greater in the overminus group (-0.74 [1.00] D) compared with the nonoverminus group (-0.44 [0.85] D; adjusted difference, -0.36 D; 95% CI, -0.59 to -0.12; P = .003), with 30 of 112 (26.8%) in the overminus group having more than 1 D of myopic shift compared with 14 of 91 (15%) in the nonoverminus group (risk ratio, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.0-3.0). From 12 to 36 months, mean (SD) myopic shift was -0.34 (0.67) D and -0.36 (0.66) D in the overminus and nonoverminus groups, respectively (adjusted difference, -0.001 D; 95% CI, -0.18 to 0.18; P = .99)., Conclusions and Relevance: The greater myopic shift observed after 1 year of -2.50-D overminus lens treatment remained at 3 years. Both groups had similar myopic shift during the 2-year period after treatment weaning and cessation. The risk of myopic shift should be discussed with parents when considering overminus lens treatment., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02807350.
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- 2024
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34. Outcomes and Complications 5 Years After Surgery for Pediatric Cataract Associated With Persistent Fetal Vasculature.
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Haider KM, Repka MX, Sutherland DR, Hatt SR, Fallaha N, Kraker RT, Melia BM, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Visual Acuity, Retrospective Studies, Postoperative Complications surgery, Cataract Extraction adverse effects, Cataract complications, Persistent Hyperplastic Primary Vitreous complications, Persistent Hyperplastic Primary Vitreous diagnosis, Persistent Hyperplastic Primary Vitreous surgery, Glaucoma surgery, Glaucoma complications
- Abstract
Purpose: To report 5-year outcomes after surgery for cataract associated with persistent fetal vasculature (PFV)., Design: Clinical cohort study using pediatric cataract registry data collected annually from medical records., Methods: This study included 64 children <13 years of age who were undergoing surgery for unilateral, nontraumatic cataract associated with PFV. Proportions with age-normal visual acuity (VA) and VA better than 20/200 at 5 years' follow-up were estimated. Cumulative incidences of complications and additional surgeries by 5 years were calculated. Outcomes were compared between eyes with unilateral PFV and eyes with unilateral non-PFV cataract from our registry., Results: Forty-eight of 64 eyes were aphakic postoperatively (median age at surgery 2 months [range 1-13 months]) and 16 were pseudophakic (29 months [range 2-92 months]). Overall, 4 of 42 eyes (10% [95% confidence interval {CI} 3%-23%]) achieved age-normal VA. VA better than 20/200 was achieved in 17 (59% [95% CI 39%-76%]) unilateral aphakic PFV eyes and 44 (43% [95% CI 32%-54%]) unilateral non-PFV aphakic eyes (age-adjusted odds ratio = 1.90 [95% CI 0.81-4.50]; P = .14). The most common complication in aphakic PFV eyes was glaucoma-related adverse events (cumulative incidence 24% [95% CI 9%-37%]). There was no significant difference in glaucoma-related adverse events between PFV and non-PFV eyes in aphakic participants ≤1 year of age at lensectomy (age-adjusted hazard ratio = 1.20 [95% CI 0.54-2.64], P = .66)., Conclusions: A wide range of visual outcomes for PFV cataract were observed with a 10% probability of achieving age-normal VA. There was an ongoing risk for the development of glaucoma-related adverse events in PFV eyes., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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35. Adult Strabismus Preferred Practice Pattern®.
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Dagi LR, Velez FG, Holmes JM, Archer SM, Strominger MB, Pineles SL, Paysse EA, Pihlblad MS, Atalay HT, Campolattaro BN, and Chang YH
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures, Oculomotor Muscles, Retrospective Studies, Strabismus surgery
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
36. Beam mask and sliding window-facilitated deep learning-based accurate and efficient dose prediction for pencil beam scanning proton therapy.
- Author
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Zhang L, Holmes JM, Liu Z, Vora SA, Sio TT, Vargas CE, Yu NY, Keole SR, Schild SE, Bues M, Li S, Liu T, Shen J, Wong WW, and Liu W
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Radiotherapy Dosage, Protons, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Proton Therapy, Deep Learning, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods, Lung Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Lung Neoplasms surgery, Prostatic Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Background: Accurate and efficient dose calculation is essential for on-line adaptive planning in proton therapy. Deep learning (DL) has shown promising dose prediction results in photon therapy. However, there is a scarcity of DL-based dose prediction methods specifically designed for proton therapy. Successful dose prediction method for proton therapy should account for more challenging dose prediction problems in pencil beam scanning proton therapy (PBSPT) due to its sensitivity to heterogeneities., Purpose: To develop a DL-based PBSPT dose prediction workflow with high accuracy and balanced complexity to support on-line adaptive proton therapy clinical decision and subsequent replanning., Methods: PBSPT plans of 103 prostate cancer patients (93 for training and the other 10 for independent testing) and 83 lung cancer patients (73 for training and the other 10 for independent testing) previously treated at our institution were included in the study, each with computed tomography scans (CTs), structure sets, and plan doses calculated by the in-house developed Monte-Carlo dose engine (considered as the ground truth in the model training and testing). For the ablation study, we designed three experiments corresponding to the following three methods: (1) Experiment 1, the conventional region of interest (ROI) (composed of targets and organs-at-risk [OARs]) method. (2) Experiment 2, the beam mask (generated by raytracing of proton beams) method to improve proton dose prediction. (3) Experiment 3, the sliding window method for the model to focus on local details to further improve proton dose prediction. A fully connected 3D-Unet was adopted as the backbone. Dose volume histogram (DVH) indices, 3D Gamma passing rates with a criterion of 3%/3 mm/10%, and dice coefficients for the structures enclosed by the iso-dose lines between the predicted and the ground truth doses were used as the evaluation metrics. The calculation time for each proton dose prediction was recorded to evaluate the method's efficiency., Results: Compared to the conventional ROI method, the beam mask method improved the agreement of DVH indices for both targets and OARs and the sliding window method further improved the agreement of the DVH indices (for lung cancer, CTV D98 absolute deviation: 0.74 ± 0.18 vs. 0.57 ± 0.21 vs. 0.54 ± 0.15 Gy[RBE], ROI vs. beam mask vs. sliding window methods, respectively). For the 3D Gamma passing rates in the target, OARs, and BODY (outside target and OARs), the beam mask method improved the passing rates in these regions and the sliding window method further improved them (for prostate cancer, targets: 96.93% ± 0.53% vs. 98.88% ± 0.49% vs. 99.97% ± 0.07%, BODY: 86.88% ± 0.74% vs. 93.21% ± 0.56% vs. 95.17% ± 0.59%). A similar trend was also observed for the dice coefficients. This trend was especially remarkable for relatively low prescription isodose lines (for lung cancer, 10% isodose line dice: 0.871 ± 0.027 vs. 0.911 ± 0.023 vs. 0.927 ± 0.017). The dose predictions for all the testing cases were completed within 0.25 s., Conclusions: An accurate and efficient deep learning-augmented proton dose prediction framework has been developed for PBSPT, which can predict accurate dose distributions not only inside but also outside ROI efficiently. The framework can potentially further reduce the initial planning and adaptive replanning workload in PBSPT., (© 2023 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)
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- 2024
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37. Modelling small block aperture in an in-house developed GPU-accelerated Monte Carlo-based dose engine for pencil beam scanning proton therapy.
- Author
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Feng H, Holmes JM, Vora SA, Stoker JB, Bues M, Wong WW, Sio TS, Foote RL, Patel SH, Shen J, and Liu W
- Subjects
- Humans, Radiotherapy Dosage, Algorithms, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Protons, Monte Carlo Method, Phantoms, Imaging, Water, Proton Therapy methods
- Abstract
Purpose . To enhance an in-house graphic-processing-unit accelerated virtual particle (VP)-based Monte Carlo (MC) proton dose engine (VPMC) to model aperture blocks in both dose calculation and optimization for pencil beam scanning proton therapy (PBSPT)-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). Methods and materials . A module to simulate VPs passing through patient-specific aperture blocks was developed and integrated in VPMC based on simulation results of realistic particles (primary protons and their secondaries). To validate the aperture block module, VPMC was first validated by an opensource MC code, MCsquare, in eight water phantom simulations with 3 cm thick brass apertures: four were with aperture openings of 1, 2, 3, and 4 cm without a range shifter, while the other four were with same aperture opening configurations with a range shifter of 45 mm water equivalent thickness. Then, VPMC was benchmarked with MCsquare and RayStation MC for 10 patients with small targets (average volume 8.4 c.c. with range of 0.4-43.3 c.c.). Finally, 3 typical patients were selected for robust optimization with aperture blocks using VPMC. Results . In the water phantoms, 3D gamma passing rate (2%/2 mm/10%) between VPMC and MCsquare was 99.71 ± 0.23%. In the patient geometries, 3D gamma passing rates (3%/2 mm/10%) between VPMC/MCsquare and RayStation MC were 97.79 ± 2.21%/97.78 ± 1.97%, respectively. Meanwhile, the calculation time was drastically decreased from 112.45 ± 114.08 s (MCsquare) to 8.20 ± 6.42 s (VPMC) with the same statistical uncertainties of ~0.5%. The robustly optimized plans met all the dose-volume-constraints (DVCs) for the targets and OARs per our institutional protocols. The mean calculation time for 13 influence matrices in robust optimization by VPMC was 41.6 s and the subsequent on-the-fly 'trial-and-error' optimization procedure took only 71.4 s on average for the selected three patients. Conclusion . VPMC has been successfully enhanced to model aperture blocks in dose calculation and optimization for the PBSPT-based SRS., (© 2024 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.)
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- 2024
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38. Eight-Year Outcomes of Bilateral Lateral Rectus Recessions versus Unilateral Recession-Resection in Childhood Basic-Type Intermittent Exotropia.
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Donahue SP, Chandler DL, Wu R, Marsh JD, Law C, Areaux RG Jr, Ghasia FF, Li Z, Kraker RT, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Follow-Up Studies, Oculomotor Muscles surgery, Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures, Visual Acuity, Chronic Disease, Treatment Outcome, Retrospective Studies, Vision, Binocular physiology, Exotropia surgery, Esotropia surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: To report 8-year outcomes from a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing bilateral lateral rectus muscle recession (BLRc) with unilateral recession-resection (R&R) for childhood intermittent exotropia (IXT)., Design: Eight-year follow-up of RCT cohort., Participants: Of 197 randomized participants, 123 agreed to continue follow-up after the 3-year outcome visit (baseline age, 3-< 11 years; basic-type IXT, 15-40 prism diopters [Δ] by prism and alternate cover test [PACT]; baseline stereoacuity, ≤ 400 arcsec; no prior surgery)., Methods: After the RCT primary outcome at 3 years, annual follow-up from 4 through 8 years with treatment at investigator discretion., Main Outcome Measures: Suboptimal surgical outcome by 8 years after randomization, defined as any of the following at any visit: exotropia of 10 Δ or more by simultaneous prism cover test (SPCT) at distance or near, constant esotropia (ET) of 6 Δ or more by SPCT at distance or near, loss of near stereoacuity by 0.6 log arcsec or more from baseline, or reoperation. Secondary outcomes included (1) reoperation by 8 years and (2) complete or near-complete resolution at 8 years, defined as exodeviation of less than 10 Δ by SPCT and PACT at distance and near and 10 Δ or more reduction from baseline by PACT at distance and near, ET of less than 6 Δ at distance and near, no decrease in stereoacuity by 0.6 log arcsec or more from baseline, and no reoperation or nonsurgical treatment for IXT., Results: The Kaplan-Meier cumulative probability of suboptimal surgical outcome through 8 years was 68% (55 events among 101 at risk) for BLRc and 53% (42 events among 96 at risk) for R&R (difference, 15%; 95% confidence interval [CI], -2% to 32%; P = 0.08). Complete or near-complete resolution at 8 years occurred in 15% (7/46) for BLRc and 37% (16/43) for R&R (difference, -22%; 95% CI, -44% to -0.1%; P = 0.049). The cumulative probability of reoperation was 30% for BLRc and 11% for R&R (difference, 19%; 95% CI, 2%-36%; P = 0.049)., Conclusions: Despite no significant difference for the primary outcome, the 95% CI did not exclude a moderate benefit of R&R, which together with secondary outcomes suggests that unilateral R&R followed by usual care may yield better long-term outcomes than BLRc followed by usual care for basic-type childhood IXT using these surgical doses., Financial Disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article., (Copyright © 2023 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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39. Complications Occurring Through 5 Years Following Primary Intraocular Lens Implantation for Pediatric Cataract.
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Yen KG, Repka MX, Sutherland DR, Haider KM, Hatt SR, Kraker RT, Galvin JA, Li Z, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Lens Implantation, Intraocular adverse effects, Lens Implantation, Intraocular methods, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Visual Acuity, Cataract Extraction adverse effects, Cataract Extraction methods, Cataract etiology, Cataract complications, Glaucoma epidemiology, Glaucoma etiology, Glaucoma surgery, Ocular Hypertension complications
- Abstract
Importance: Lensectomy with primary intraocular lens (IOL) implantation is often used in the management of nontraumatic pediatric cataract, but long-term data evaluating the association of age and IOL location with the incidence of complications are limited., Objective: To describe the incidence of complications and additional eye surgeries through 5 years following pediatric lensectomy with primary IOL implantation and association with age at surgery and IOL location., Design, Setting, and Participants: This prospective cohort study used Pediatric Eye Disease Investigator Group cataract registry data from 61 institution- and community-based practices over 3 years (June 2012 to July 2015). Participants were children younger than 13 years without baseline glaucoma who had primary IOL implantation (345 bilateral and 264 unilateral) for nontraumatic cataract. Data analysis was performed between September 2021 and January 2023., Exposures: Lensectomy with primary IOL implantation., Main Outcome and Measures: Five-year cumulative incidence of complications by age at surgery (<2 years, 2 to <4 years, 4 to <7 years, and 7 to <13 years) and by IOL location (sulcus vs capsular bag) were estimated using Cox proportional hazards models., Results: The cohort included 609 eyes from 491 children (mean [SD] age, 5.6 [3.3] years; 261 [53%] male and 230 [47%] female). Following cataract extraction with primary IOL implantation, a frequent complication was surgery for visual axis opacification (VAO) (cumulative incidence, 32%; 95% CI, 27%-36%). Cumulative incidence was lower with anterior vitrectomy at the time of IOL placement (12%; 95% CI, 8%-16%) vs without (58%; 95% CI, 50%-65%), and the risk of undergoing surgery for VAO was associated with not performing anterior vitrectomy (hazard ratio [HR], 6.19; 95% CI, 3.70-10.34; P < .001). After adjusting for anterior vitrectomy at lens surgery, there were no differences in incidence of surgery for VAO by age at surgery (<2 years, HR, 1.35 [95% CI, 0.63-2.87], 2 to <4 years, HR, 0.86 [95% CI, 0.44-1.68], 4 to <7 years, HR, 1.06 [95% CI, 0.72-1.56]; P = .74) or by capsular bag vs sulcus IOL fixation (HR, 1.22; 95% CI, 0.36-4.17; P = .75). Cumulative incidence of glaucoma plus glaucoma suspect by 5 years was 7% (95% CI, 4%-9%), which did not differ by age after controlling for IOL location and laterality., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study, a frequent complication following pediatric lensectomy with primary IOL was surgery for VAO, which was associated with primary anterior vitrectomy not being performed but was not associated with age at surgery or IOL location. The risk of glaucoma development across all ages at surgery suggests a need for long-term monitoring.
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- 2023
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40. Association of preoperative sensory monofixation with surgical failure in adult-onset divergence insufficiency-type esotropia.
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Dersch AM, Leske DA, Hatt SR, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Preschool, Adult, Child, Retrospective Studies, Visual Acuity, Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures, Oculomotor Muscles surgery, Vision, Binocular, Treatment Outcome, Esotropia surgery, Strabismus surgery
- Abstract
We investigated the frequency of sensory monofixation in patients with adult-onset divergence insufficiency esotropia and whether preoperative sensory monofixation was associated with surgical failure. Twenty-five patients with esotropia greater at distance than near who underwent bilateral medial rectus recessions were included. Near stereoacuity was measured preoperatively and 8 weeks postoperatively using the Randot Preschool test. Patients with best-corrected visual acuity worse than 0.3 logMAR in either eye or preoperative diplopia "rarely" or "never" in straight-ahead gaze at distance were excluded to minimize the inclusion of decompensated childhood strabismus. Sensory monofixation was defined as stereoacuity of 200 arcsec or worse and bifixation as 40 or 60 arcsec. Surgical failure was defined as esodeviation of >4
Δ or exodeviation of >10Δ at distance or near, assessed 8 weeks (range, 6-17 weeks) postoperatively. We calculated the frequency of monofixation and surgical failure rates among patients with preoperative monofixation and those with preoperative bifixation. Preoperatively, sensory monofixation was common in divergence insufficiency-type esotropia (16 of 25 [64%]; 95% CI, 45%-83%). None of those with preoperative sensory monofixation had surgical failure, which does not support an association of surgical failure with preoperative monofixation., (Copyright © 2023 American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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41. Low-Dose 0.01% Atropine Eye Drops vs Placebo for Myopia Control: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Repka MX, Weise KK, Chandler DL, Wu R, Melia BM, Manny RE, Kehler LAF, Jordan CO, Raghuram A, Summers AI, Lee KA, Petersen DB, Erzurum SA, Pang Y, Lenhart PD, Ticho BH, Beck RW, Kraker RT, Holmes JM, and Cotter SA
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Female, Child, Preschool, Ophthalmic Solutions administration & dosage, Refraction, Ocular, Vision Tests, Disease Progression, Atropine administration & dosage, Myopia diagnosis, Myopia drug therapy
- Abstract
Importance: Controlling myopia progression is of interest worldwide. Low-dose atropine eye drops have slowed progression in children in East Asia., Objective: To compare atropine, 0.01%, eye drops with placebo for slowing myopia progression in US children., Design, Setting, and Participants: This was a randomized placebo-controlled, double-masked, clinical trial conducted from June 2018 to September 2022. Children aged 5 to 12 years were recruited from 12 community- and institution-based practices in the US. Participating children had low to moderate bilateral myopia (-1.00 diopters [D] to -6.00 D spherical equivalent refractive error [SER])., Intervention: Eligible children were randomly assigned 2:1 to 1 eye drop of atropine, 0.01%, nightly or 1 drop of placebo. Treatment was for 24 months followed by 6 months of observation., Main Outcome and Measures: Automated cycloplegic refraction was performed by masked examiners. The primary outcome was change in SER (mean of both eyes) from baseline to 24 months (receiving treatment); other outcomes included change in SER from baseline to 30 months (not receiving treatment) and change in axial length at both time points. Differences were calculated as atropine minus placebo., Results: A total of 187 children (mean [SD] age, 10.1 [1.8] years; age range, 5.1-12.9 years; 101 female [54%]; 34 Black [18%], 20 East Asian [11%], 30 Hispanic or Latino [16%], 11 multiracial [6%], 6 West/South Asian [3%], 86 White [46%]) were included in the study. A total of 125 children (67%) received atropine, 0.01%, and 62 children (33%) received placebo. Follow-up was completed at 24 months by 119 of 125 children (95%) in the atropine group and 58 of 62 children (94%) in the placebo group. At 30 months, follow-up was completed by 118 of 125 children (94%) in the atropine group and 57 of 62 children (92%) in the placebo group. At the 24-month primary outcome visit, the adjusted mean (95% CI) change in SER from baseline was -0.82 (-0.96 to -0.68) D and -0.80 (-0.98 to -0.62) D in the atropine and placebo groups, respectively (adjusted difference = -0.02 D; 95% CI, -0.19 to +0.15 D; P = .83). At 30 months (6 months not receiving treatment), the adjusted difference in mean SER change from baseline was -0.04 D (95% CI, -0.25 to +0.17 D). Adjusted mean (95% CI) changes in axial length from baseline to 24 months were 0.44 (0.39-0.50) mm and 0.45 (0.37-0.52) mm in the atropine and placebo groups, respectively (adjusted difference = -0.002 mm; 95% CI, -0.106 to 0.102 mm). Adjusted difference in mean axial elongation from baseline to 30 months was +0.009 mm (95% CI, -0.115 to 0.134 mm)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this randomized clinical trial of school-aged children in the US with low to moderate myopia, atropine, 0.01%, eye drops administered nightly when compared with placebo did not slow myopia progression or axial elongation. These results do not support use of atropine, 0.01%, eye drops to slow myopia progression or axial elongation in US children., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03334253.
- Published
- 2023
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42. Modelling small block aperture in an in-house developed GPU-accelerated Monte Carlo-based dose engine for pencil beam scanning proton therapy.
- Author
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Feng H, Holmes JM, Vora SA, Stoker JB, Bues M, Wong WW, Sio TS, Foote RL, Patel SH, Shen J, and Liu W
- Abstract
Purpose: To enhance an in-house graphic-processing-unit (GPU) accelerated virtual particle (VP)-based Monte Carlo (MC) proton dose engine (VPMC) to model aperture blocks in both dose calculation and optimization for pencil beam scanning proton therapy (PBSPT)-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS)., Methods and Materials: A module to simulate VPs passing through patient-specific aperture blocks was developed and integrated in VPMC based on simulation results of realistic particles (primary protons and their secondaries). To validate the aperture block module, VPMC was first validated by an opensource MC code, MCsquare, in eight water phantom simulations with 3cm thick brass apertures: four were with aperture openings of 1, 2, 3, and 4cm without a range shifter, while the other four were with same aperture opening configurations with a range shifter of 45mm water equivalent thickness. Then, VPMC was benchmarked with MCsquare and RayStation MC for 10 patients with small targets (average volume 8.4 cc with range of 0.4 - 43.3 cc). Finally, 3 typical patients were selected for robust optimization with aperture blocks using VPMC., Results: In the water phantoms, 3D gamma passing rate (2%/2mm/10%) between VPMC and MCsquare was 99.71±0.23%. In the patient geometries, 3D gamma passing rates (3%/2mm/10%) between VPMC/MCsquare and RayStation MC were 97.79±2.21%/97.78±1.97%, respectively. Meanwhile, the calculation time was drastically decreased from 112.45±114.08 seconds (MCsquare) to 8.20±6.42 seconds (VPMC) with the same statistical uncertainties of ~0.5%. The robustly optimized plans met all the dose-volume-constraints (DVCs) for the targets and OARs per our institutional protocols. The mean calculation time for 13 influence matrices in robust optimization by VPMC was 41.6 seconds and the subsequent on-the-fly "trial-and-error" optimization procedure took only 71.4 seconds on average for the selected three patients., Conclusion: VPMC has been successfully enhanced to model aperture blocks in dose calculation and optimization for the PBSPT-based SRS., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Statement Conflict of Interest: None
- Published
- 2023
43. A Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial of Base-in Relieving Prism Spectacle Treatment of Intermittent Exotropia.
- Author
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Summers AI, Morrison DG, Chandler DL, Henderson RJ, Chen AM, Leske DA, Walker KR, Li Z, Melia BM, Bitner DP, Kurup SP, Allen M, Phillips PH, Nash DL, Grigorian AP, Kraus CL, Miller AM, Titelbaum JR, Kraker RT, Holmes JM, and Cotter SA
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Child, Preschool, Eyeglasses, Pilot Projects, Refraction, Ocular, Vision Tests, Exotropia therapy
- Abstract
Significance: This pilot randomized trial, the first to evaluate a specific base-in relieving prism treatment strategy for childhood intermittent exotropia, did not support proceeding to a full-scale clinical trial. Defining and measuring prism adaptation in children with intermittent exotropia are challenging and need further study., Purpose: This study aimed to determine whether to proceed to a full-scale trial of relieving base-in prism spectacles versus refractive correction alone for children with intermittent exotropia., Methods: Children 3 years old to those younger than 13 years with distance intermittent exotropia control score of ≥2 points on the Intermittent Exotropia Office Control Scale (Strabismus 2006;14:147-150; 0 [phoria] to 5 [constant]), ≥1 episode of spontaneous exotropia, and 16 to 35∆ by prism-and-alternate-cover test, who did not fully prism adapt on a 30-minute in-office prism-adaptation test were randomized to base-in relieving prism (40% of the larger of distance and near exodeviations) or nonprism spectacles for 8 weeks. A priori criteria to conduct a full-scale trial were defined for the adjusted treatment group difference in mean distance control: "proceed" (≥0.75 points favoring prism), "uncertain" (>0 to <0.75 points favoring prism), or "do not proceed" (≥0 points favoring nonprism)., Results: Fifty-seven children (mean age, 6.6 ± 2.2 years; mean baseline distance control, 3.5 points) received prism (n = 28) or nonprism (n = 29) spectacles. At 8 weeks, mean control values were 3.6 and 3.3 points in prism (n = 25) and nonprism (n = 25) groups, respectively, with an adjusted difference of 0.3 points (95% confidence interval, -0.5 to 1.1 points) favoring nonprism (meeting our a priori "do not proceed" criterion)., Conclusions: Base-in prism spectacles, equal to 40% of the larger of the exodeviations at distance or near, worn for 8 weeks by 3- to 12-year-old children with intermittent exotropia did not yield better distance control than refractive correction alone, with the confidence interval indicating that a favorable effect of 0.75 points or larger is unlikely. There was insufficient evidence to warrant a full-scale randomized trial., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Disclosure: None of the authors have reported a financial conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 American Academy of Optometry.)
- Published
- 2023
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44. Vascular Risk Factors in Isolated Microvascular Ischemic Third Nerve Palsy: A Population-Based Study.
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Zhao B, Bhatti MT, Fang C, Hodge DO, Holmes JM, Mohney BG, and Chen JJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Case-Control Studies, Risk Factors, Ischemia, Coronary Artery Disease, Diabetic Retinopathy complications, Oculomotor Nerve Diseases etiology, Stroke epidemiology, Stroke complications, Hypertension complications, Hypertension epidemiology, Ischemic Stroke
- Abstract
Background: Although presumed microvascular third nerve palsies (TNP) have been associated with vascular risk factors and/or stroke, these associations have not been explored in a population-based cohort. The purpose of this population-based case-control study was to determine whether these factors are associated with TNPs that had been classified as isolated microvascular ischemic events and determine future risk of mortality., Methods: Participants were subjects >18 years old with new onset of isolated TNP attributed to presumed microvascular ischemia (n = 55) while residing in Olmsted County, Minnesota, from January 1, 1978 to December 31, 2014. Control subjects (n = 55) were randomly selected from the same population and matched for gender, age, and length of medical follow-up. We identified all cases of new-onset isolated presumed microvascular ischemic TNP using the Rochester Epidemiology Project, a record-linkage system of medical records for all patient-physician encounters in Olmsted County, Minnesota. All medical records of cases and controls were reviewed for potential risk factors, including diabetes mellitus, diabetic retinopathy, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, smoking, and symptomatic ischemic stroke. Multivariable and univariate logistic regression analyses were used to compare the prevalence of potential risk factors between microvascular ischemic cases and controls according to the number of subjects, and odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated. Kaplan-Meier curves were used to compare mortality between cases and controls., Results: The annual incidence of microvascular ischemic TNP was 1.7 per 100,000. Univariate analysis demonstrated that hypertension ( P < 0.001; OR, 4.80; 95% CI, 2.11-11.58), diabetes mellitus ( P < 0.001; OR, 6.55; 95% CI, 2.72-17.32), diabetic retinopathy ( P = 0.014; OR, 13.50; 95% CI, 2.48-251.55), coronary artery disease ( P = 0.047; OR, 2.27; 95% CI, 1.02-5.18), and symptomatic ischemic stroke ( P = 0.039; OR, 3.56; 95% CI, 1.07-11.85) all occurred more frequently in patients with microvascular ischemic TNP than controls. In multivariate analysis, only hypertension (OR of 4.14, 95% CI, 1.61-10.65, P < 0.001) and diabetes (OR of 4.12, 95% CI, 1.43-11.92, P = 0.003) remained independently statistically significant. There was numerically higher mortality in microvascular cases than in controls, but it did not reach statistical significance., Conclusions: There are multiple cardiovascular diseases that are associated with isolated microvascular ischemic TNP, including hypertension, coronary artery disease, diabetes mellitus, diabetic retinopathy, and symptomatic ischemic stroke. Given that the main drivers of this association seem to be diabetes and hypertension, patients with microvascular ischemic TNP should be evaluated for these conditions., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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45. Improved control of intermittent exotropia with part-time patching.
- Author
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Hatt SR, Kraker RT, Leske DA, Chandler DL, Fallaha N, Mohney BG, Ticho BH, Li Z, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Chronic Disease, Exotropia therapy
- Abstract
We evaluated the effect of part-time patching versus observation on distance exodeviation control in post hoc analyses of 3- to <11-year-olds with intermittent exotropia who were assigned to either patching 3 hours/day or observation in a previously reported randomized clinical trial. The present analysis was limited to a subgroup of 306 participants who at distance fixation spontaneously manifested either a constant or intermittent exotropia or had prolonged recovery after monocular occlusion (a distance control score of 2 or worse using the 0-5 Office Control Score scale) at baseline. We assessed change in control at distance and near fixation, from baseline to 3 months and baseline to 6 months (1 month after discontinuing patching). We found greater improvement in the distance control score with patching than with observation at 3 months (mean difference, 0.4 points; 95% CI, 0.1-0.7) and 6 months (mean difference, 0.3 points; 95% CI, 0.02-0.6). These analyses suggest that part-time patching may improve distance control in children with intermittent exotropia and a control score ≥ 2; however, because this conclusion is based on post hoc subgroup analyses, further studies are needed., (Copyright © 2023 American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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46. Beam mask and sliding window-facilitated deep learning-based accurate and efficient dose prediction for pencil beam scanning proton therapy.
- Author
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Zhang L, Holmes JM, Liu Z, Vora SA, Sio TT, Vargas CE, Yu NY, Keole SR, Schild SE, Bues M, Li S, Liu T, Shen J, Wong WW, and Liu W
- Abstract
Purpose: To develop a DL-based PBSPT dose prediction workflow with high accuracy and balanced complexity to support on-line adaptive proton therapy clinical decision and subsequent replanning., Methods: PBSPT plans of 103 prostate cancer patients and 83 lung cancer patients previously treated at our institution were included in the study, each with CTs, structure sets, and plan doses calculated by the in-house developed Monte-Carlo dose engine. For the ablation study, we designed three experiments corresponding to the following three methods: 1) Experiment 1, the conventional region of interest (ROI) method. 2) Experiment 2, the beam mask (generated by raytracing of proton beams) method to improve proton dose prediction. 3) Experiment 3, the sliding window method for the model to focus on local details to further improve proton dose prediction. A fully connected 3D-Unet was adopted as the backbone. Dose volume histogram (DVH) indices, 3D Gamma passing rates, and dice coefficients for the structures enclosed by the iso-dose lines between the predicted and the ground truth doses were used as the evaluation metrics. The calculation time for each proton dose prediction was recorded to evaluate the method's efficiency., Results: Compared to the conventional ROI method, the beam mask method improved the agreement of DVH indices for both targets and OARs and the sliding window method further improved the agreement of the DVH indices. For the 3D Gamma passing rates in the target, OARs, and BODY (outside target and OARs), the beam mask method can improve the passing rates in these regions and the sliding window method further improved them. A similar trend was also observed for the dice coefficients. In fact, this trend was especially remarkable for relatively low prescription isodose lines. The dose predictions for all the testing cases were completed within 0.25s.
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- 2023
47. Incidence of Glaucoma-Related Adverse Events in the First 5 Years After Pediatric Lensectomy.
- Author
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Bothun ED, Repka MX, Kraker RT, Wu R, Leske DA, Hatt SR, Li Z, Freedman SF, Astle WF, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Male, Female, Infant, Child, Preschool, Pseudophakia, Incidence, Cohort Studies, Intraocular Pressure, Aphakia, Postcataract epidemiology, Aphakia, Postcataract etiology, Cataract Extraction adverse effects, Cataract Extraction statistics & numerical data, Glaucoma diagnosis, Cataract etiology, Cataract complications, Ocular Hypertension etiology
- Abstract
Importance: Glaucoma can develop following cataract removal in children., Objective: To assess the cumulative incidence of glaucoma-related adverse events (defined as glaucoma or glaucoma suspect) and factors associated with risk of these adverse events in the first 5 years after lensectomy prior to 13 years of age., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study used longitudinal registry data collected at enrollment and annually for 5 years from 45 institutional and 16 community sites. Participants were children aged 12 years or younger with at least 1 office visit after lensectomy from June 2012 to July 2015. Data were analyzed from February through December 2022., Exposures: Usual clinical care after lensectomy., Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcomes were cumulative incidence of glaucoma-related adverse events and baseline factors associated with risk of these adverse events., Results: The study included 810 children (1049 eyes); 443 eyes of 321 children (55% female; mean [SD] age, 0.89 [1.97] years) were aphakic after lensectomy, and 606 eyes of 489 children (53% male; mean [SD] age, 5.65 [3.32] years) were pseudophakic. The 5-year cumulative incidence of glaucoma-related adverse events was 29% (95% CI, 25%-34%) in 443 eyes with aphakia and 7% (95% CI, 5%-9%) in 606 eyes with pseudophakia; 7% (95% CI, 5%-10%) of aphakic eyes and 3% (95% CI, 2%-5%) of pseudophakic eyes were diagnosed as glaucoma suspect. Among aphakic eyes, a higher risk for glaucoma-related adverse events was associated with 4 of 8 factors, including age less than 3 months (vs ≥3 months: adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 2.88; 99% CI, 1.57-5.23), abnormal anterior segment (vs normal: aHR, 2.88; 99% CI, 1.56-5.30), intraoperative complications at time of lensectomy (vs none; aHR, 2.25; 99% CI, 1.04-4.87), and bilaterality (vs unilaterality: aHR, 1.88; 99% CI, 1.02-3.48). Neither of the 2 factors evaluated for pseudophakic eyes, laterality and anterior vitrectomy, were associated with risk of glaucoma-related adverse events., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study, glaucoma-related adverse events were common after cataract surgery in children; age less than 3 months at surgery was associated with elevated risk of the adverse events in aphakic eyes. Children with pseudophakia, who were older at surgery, less frequently developed a glaucoma-related adverse event within 5 years of lensectomy. The findings suggest that ongoing monitoring for the development of glaucoma is needed after lensectomy at any age.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Ocular and developmental outcomes of a dosing study of bevacizumab for retinopathy of prematurity.
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Wallace DK, Hercinovic A, Freedman SF, Crouch ER, Bhatt AR, Hartnett ME, Yang MB, Rogers DL, Hutchinson AK, Good WV, Repka MX, Li Z, Beck RW, Kraker RT, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Infant, Newborn, Infant, Humans, Bevacizumab therapeutic use, Angiogenesis Inhibitors therapeutic use, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A, Gestational Age, Intravitreal Injections, Retrospective Studies, Retinopathy of Prematurity drug therapy, Myopia
- Abstract
Purpose: To report 2-year ocular and developmental outcomes for infants receiving low doses of intravitreal bevacizumab for type 1 retinopathy of prematurity (ROP)., Methods: A total of 120 premature infants (mean birthweight, 687 g; mean gestational age, 24.8 weeks) with type 1 ROP were enrolled in a multicenter, phase 1 dose de-escalation study. One eye per infant received 0.25 mg, 0.125 mg, 0.063 mg, 0.031 mg, 0.016 mg, 0.008 mg, 0.004 mg, or 0.002 mg of intravitreal bevacizumab; fellow eyes when treated received one dosage level higher. At 2 years, 70 of 120 children (58%) underwent ocular examinations; 51 (43%) were assessed using the Bayley Scale of Infant and Toddler Development., Results: Correlation coefficients for the association of total dosage of bevacizumab with Bayley subscales were -0.20 for cognitive (95% CI, -0.45 to 0.08), -0.15 for motor (95% CI, -0.41 to 0.14), and -0.19 for language (95% CI, -0.44 to 0.10). Fourteen children (21%) had myopia greater than -5.00 D in one or both eyes, 7 (10%) had optic nerve atrophy and/or cupping, 20 (29%) had strabismus, 8 (11%) had manifest nystagmus, and 9 (13%) had amblyopia., Conclusions: In this study cohort, there was no statistically significant correlation between dosage of bevacizumab and Bayley scores at 2 years. However, the sample size was small and the retention rate relatively low, limiting our conclusions. Rates of high myopia and ocular abnormalities do not differ from those reported after larger bevacizumab doses., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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49. Evaluation and Management of Divergence Insufficiency-Type Esotropia.
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Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Aged, Diplopia diagnosis, Diplopia therapy, Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures, Vision, Binocular, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Esotropia surgery, Strabismus surgery
- Abstract
Divergence insufficiency-type ET is a common cause of distance diplopia in elderly adults. A recent prospective multicenter data collection study has provided additional guidance on management. Either base-out prism glasses or strabismus surgery were found to have high success rates, based on patient report of diplopia, and health-related quality-of-life domain scores. It was concluded that either prism or surgery were reasonable initial treatment strategies. Although allocation bias precluded formal comparison of prism versus surgery (evident in baseline differences between groups), there were hints that surgery may yield superior outcomes. For surgery, the most common approach was bilateral medial rectus recession, which was highly successful when assessed 10 weeks and 12 months postoperatively. It was unclear whether adjustable sutures were helpful, but in the vast majority of adjustable cases, additional recession at the time of adjustment was performed, suggesting that larger than standard surgical doses are needed.
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- 2022
50. Low- and Very Low-Dose Bevacizumab for Retinopathy of Prematurity: Reactivations, Additional Treatments, and 12-Month Outcomes.
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Freedman SF, Hercinovic A, Wallace DK, Kraker RT, Li Z, Bhatt AR, Boente CS, Crouch ER, Hubbard GB, Rogers DL, VanderVeen D, Yang MB, Cheung NL, Cotter SA, and Holmes JM
- Subjects
- Angiogenesis Inhibitors therapeutic use, Bevacizumab therapeutic use, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Intravitreal Injections, Laser Coagulation, Retrospective Studies, Retinopathy of Prematurity diagnosis, Retinopathy of Prematurity drug therapy, Retinopathy of Prematurity surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: Low-dose and very low-dose intravitreal bevacizumab (IVB) have been reported to be successful in short-term treatment of type 1 retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), down to an initial dose of 0.004 mg. We now report 12-month outcomes for these infants., Design: Masked, multicenter, dose de-escalation study., Participants: One hundred twenty prematurely born infants with type 1 ROP., Methods: A cohort of 120 infants with type 1 ROP in at least 1 eye from 2 sequential dose de-escalation studies of low-dose IVB (0.25 mg, 0.125 mg, 0.063 mg, and 0.031 mg) or very low-dose IVB (0.016 mg, 0.008 mg, 0.004 mg, and 0.002 mg) to the study eye; the fellow eye (if also type 1) received 1 dose level higher of IVB. After primary success or failure at 4 weeks, clinical management was at investigator discretion, including all additional treatment., Main Outcome Measures: Reactivation of severe ROP by 6 months corrected age, additional treatments, retinal and other ocular structural outcomes, and refractive error at 12 months corrected age., Results: Sixty-two of 113 study eyes (55%) and 55 of 98 fellow eyes (56%) received additional treatment. Of the study eyes, 31 (27%) received additional ROP treatment, and 31 (27%) received prophylactic laser therapy for persistent avascular retina. No trend toward a higher risk of additional ROP treatment related to initial IVB doses was found. However, time to reactivation among study eyes was shorter in eyes that received very low-dose IVB (mean, 76.4 days) than in those that received low-dose IVB (mean, 85.7 days). At 12 months, poor retinal outcomes and anterior segment abnormalities both were uncommon (3% and 5%, respectively), optic atrophy was noted in 10%, median refraction was mildly myopic (-0.31 diopter), and strabismus was present in 29% of infants., Conclusions: Retinal structural outcomes were very good after low- and very low-dose IVB as initial treatment for type 1 ROP, although many eyes received additional treatment. The rate of reactivation of severe ROP was not associated with dose; however, a post hoc data-driven analysis suggested that reactivation was sooner with very low doses., (Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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