advertisement

WGA Rescources

Editors Selection IGR 12-3

Diagnostic Methods: OCT: Age-related RNFL loss

Tae-Woo Kim

Comment by Tae-Woo Kim on:

50036 Retinal nerve fiber layer imaging with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography: a prospective analysis of age-related loss, Leung CK; Yu M; Weinreb RN et al., Ophthalmology, 2012; 119: 731-737


Find related abstracts


While age related loss of retinal ganglion cells or decline of the retinalnerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness with age has been suggested, such observation was based on cross-sectional data with linear regression analysis. Leung et al. examined the age-related change of the circumpapillary RNFL thickness measured by spectral domain OCT using both cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis. One hundred normal individuals were recruited for cross-sectional analysis, 35 of whom were randomly selected for longitudinal analysis. In the cross-sectional analysis, they found significant negative correlations between age and average, inferior and temporal RNFL thickness. The rates of decline were -0.33, -0.45 µm/year and -0.31 µm/year for average, inferior and temporal RNFL thicknesses, respectively. In the longitudinal analysis, the mean rates of change of average, superior, and inferior RNFL thicknesses were -0.52, -1.35 and -1.25 µm/year, respectively, after adjusting for baseline RNFL thickness, spherical error, disc area and signal strength. A greater baseline RNFL thickness was associated with a faster rate of change. This information is clinically relevant in evaluating glaucoma progression. When a clinician detects a decline of a RNFL using a trend-based analysis, the rate may be the sum of age-related change and the change derived from glaucoma progression.

When a clinician detects a decline of a RNFL using a trend-based analysis, the rate may be the sum of age-related change and the change derived from glaucoma progression

The data reported in the study may provide a guide by which clinicians may delineate the RNFL thickness decline attributable to glaucoma progression. Meanwhile, it is of interest to note that the result from the cross-sectional analysis and longitudinal analyses disagree in this study. The disagreement suggests that the argument that knowledge of age-related change should come from longitudinal data and not extrapolation from cross-sectional data.



Comments

The comment section on the IGR website is restricted to WGA#One members only. Please log-in through your WGA#One account to continue.

Log-in through WGA#One

Issue 12-3

Change Issue


advertisement

Oculus