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Otitis Media Middle Ear Effusion Identification and Characterization Using an Optical Coherence Tomography Otoscope.

Authors :
Preciado, Diego
Nolan, Ryan M.
Joshi, Radhika
Krakovsky, Gina M.
Zhang, Anqi
Pudik, Nickolas A.
Kumar, Nankee K.
Shelton, Ryan L.
Boppart, Stephen A.
Bauman, Nancy M.
Source :
Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery; Mar2020, Vol. 162 Issue 3, p367-374, 8p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>To determine the feasibility of detecting and differentiating middle ear effusions (MEEs) using an optical coherence tomography (OCT) otoscope.<bold>Study Design: </bold>Cross-sectional study.<bold>Setting: </bold>US tertiary care children's hospital.<bold>Subjects and Methods: </bold>Seventy pediatric patients undergoing tympanostomy tube placement were preoperatively imaged using an OCT otoscope. A blinded reader quiz was conducted using 24 readers from 4 groups of tiered medical expertise. The primary outcome assessed was reader ability to detect presence/absence of MEE. A secondary outcome assessed was reader ability to differentiate serous vs nonserous MEE.<bold>Results: </bold>OCT image data sets were analyzed from 45 of 70 total subjects. Blinded reader analysis of an OCT data subset for detection of MEE resulted in 90.6% accuracy, 90.9% sensitivity, 90.2% specificity, and intra/interreader agreement of 92.9% and 87.1%, respectively. Differentiating MEE type, reader identification of nonserous MEE had 70.8% accuracy, 53.6% sensitivity, 80.1% specificity, and intra/interreader agreement of 82.9% and 75.1%, respectively. Multivariate analysis revealed that age was the strongest predictor of OCT quality. The mean age of subjects with quality OCT was 5.01 years (n = 45), compared to 2.54 years (n = 25) in the remaining subjects imaged (P = .0028). The ability to capture quality images improved over time, from 50% to 69.4% over the study period.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>OCT otoscopy shows promise for facilitating accurate MEE detection. The imageability with the prototype device was affected by age, with older children being easier to image, similar to current ear diagnostic technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01945998
Volume :
162
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142040167
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0194599819900762