Home-Monitoring Vision Tests to Detect Active Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration

Ruth E Hogg, Sobha Sivaprasad, Robin Wickens, Sean O'Connor, Eleanor Gidman, Elizabeth Ward, Charlene Treanor, Tunde Peto, Ben J L Burton, Paul Knox, Andrew J Lotery, Michael Donnelly, Chris A Rogers, Barnaby C Reeves

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Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Most neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) treatments involve long-term follow-up of disease activity. Home-monitoring would reduce the burden on patients and their caregivers and release clinic capacity.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate 3 vision home-monitoring tests for patients to use to detect active nAMD compared with diagnosing active nAMD at hospital follow-up during the after-treatment monitoring phase.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a diagnostic test accuracy study wherein the reference standard was detection of active nAMD by an ophthalmologist at hospital follow-up. The 3 home-monitoring tests evaluated included the following: (1) the KeepSight Journal (KSJ [International Macular and Retinal Foundation]), which contains paper-based near-vision tests presented as word puzzles, (2) the MyVisionTrack (mVT [Genentech]) vision-monitoring mobile app, viewed on an Apple mobile operating system-based device, and (3) the MultiBit (MBT [Visumetrics]) app, viewed on an Apple mobile operating system-based device. Participants were asked to test weekly; mVT and MBT scores were transmitted automatically, and KSJ scores were returned to the research office every 6 months. Raw scores between hospital follow-ups were summarized as averages. Patients were recruited from 6 UK hospital eye clinics and were 50 years and older with at least 1 eye first treated for active nAMD for at least 6 months or longer to a maximum of 42 months before approach. Participants were stratified by time since starting treatment. Study data were analyzed from May to September 2021.

EXPOSURES: The KSJ, mVT, and MBT were compared with the reference standard (in-hospital ophthalmologist examination).

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Estimated area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC). The study had 90% power to detect a difference of 0.06, or 80% power to detect a difference of 0.05, if the AUROC for 2 tests was 0.75.

RESULTS: A total of 297 patients (mean [SD] age, 74.9 [6.6] years; 174 female [58.6%]) were included in the study. At least 1 hospital follow-up was available for 312 study eyes in 259 participants (1549 complete visits). Median (IQR) home-monitoring testing frequency was 3 (1-4) times per month. Estimated AUROC was less than 0.6 for all home-monitoring tests, and only the KSJ summary score was associated with lesion activity (odds ratio, 3.48; 95% CI, 1.09-11.13; P = .04).

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Results suggest that no home-monitoring vision test evaluated provided satisfactory diagnostic accuracy to identify active nAMD diagnosed in hospital eye service follow-up clinics. Implementing any of these evaluated tests, with ophthalmologists only reviewing test positives, would mean most active lesions were missed, risking unnecessary sight loss.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)512-520
Number of pages9
JournalJAMA Ophthalmology
Volume142
Issue number6
Early online date25 Apr 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 20 Jun 2024

Bibliographical note

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© 2024 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

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