Prediction of Postoperative Visual Outcome in Patients with Idiopathic Epiretinal Membrane.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_75E070F3E6AD
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Prediction of Postoperative Visual Outcome in Patients with Idiopathic Epiretinal Membrane.
Journal
Ophthalmologica. Journal international d'ophtalmologie. International journal of ophthalmology. Zeitschrift fur Augenheilkunde
Author(s)
Chatzistergiou V., Papasavvas I., Ambresin A., Pournaras J.C.
ISSN
1423-0267 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0030-3755
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
244
Number
6
Pages
535-542
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
The aim of this study was to estimate the association between preoperative characteristics in subjects with idiopathic epiretinal membrane (ERM) and visual acuity improvement after vitrectomy and create an algorithm for predicting postoperative visual outcome.
In a retrospective, cross-sectional study, we included adults with idiopathic ERM and excluded subjects with low-quality scans, other ocular conditions, and previous surgery except cataract surgery. Baseline characteristics were extracted from medical files, spectral-domain OCT, and OCT angiography. Visual improvement was expressed as a binary variable.
Fifty-four subjects were included in the study. Three months postoperatively, 30 subjects improved, 10 remained stable, and 14 deteriorated. Spearman correlation showed no correlation between variables and visual acuity improvement (<0.39). Reduced dimensionality showed that baseline visual acuity, lens status, foveal aspect, spherical equivalent, and 2 interactive variables including foveal aspect and lens status have the strongest effect on improvement. Five-fold logistic regression based on these variables provided a model with AUC 0.9 ± 0.06.
No variable has a direct predictive role on visual acuity improvement; however, baseline visual acuity, lens status, foveal aspect and spherical equivalent, when combined, provide a predictive model that could serve as a tool for more informed decisions.
Keywords
Cross-Sectional Studies, Epiretinal Membrane/diagnosis, Epiretinal Membrane/surgery, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Epiretinal membrane peeling, Idiopathic epiretinal membrane, Optical coherence tomography angiography, Pars plana vitrectomy, Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
11/01/2022 13:25
Last modification date
02/12/2023 8:15
Usage data