Screening for glaucoma with a novel eye movement perimetry technique based on continuous visual stimulus tracking

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Abstract

Purpose

Standard automated perimetry (SAP) is the gold standard for functional assessment in glaucoma. SAP can be too demanding for some groups of patients. Continuous visual stimulus tracking (SONDA: Standardized Oculomotor and Neurological Disorders Assessment) simplifies the perimetric task to following a moving stimulus on a screen. In this study we evaluated the screening performance of SONDA-based eye movement perimetry (SONDA-EMP) in glaucoma. To explore generalizability, we evaluated an experimental setup (SONDA-Eyelink) and a clinic-ready version (SONDA-Neon).

Methods

SONDA-Eyelink and SONDA-Neon measurements were performed in 100 cases with glaucoma (36, 36, and 28 with early, moderate, and severe glaucoma, respectively) and 100 age-similar controls. Participants monocularly tracked a moving stimulus (Goldmann size III) at 40% contrast (both setups) and 160% (SONDA-Eyelink). Eye movements were continuously recorded. Outcome was the agreement between gaze and stimulus position. We used previously collected glaucoma case-control data to build a continuous ‘glaucoma screening score’. This score was used for an ROC-analysis applied to the current, independently collected dataset. We predefined good screening performance as: at 95% specificity, a sensitivity of at least 50%, 90%, and 100% for early, moderate, and severe glaucoma, respectively.

Results

At 95% specificity, the sensitivity of SONDA-Eyelink was 58, 94, and 100% at 40% contrast and 56, 97, and 100% at 160% contrast for early, moderate, and severe glaucoma, respectively. Sensitivity was 53, 94, and 100% for SONDA-Neon.

Conclusions

SONDA-EMP is a novel, fast, and intuitive method to screen for visual function loss in glaucoma.

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