4.6 Article

Posterior Eye Shape Measurement With Retinal OCT Compared to MRI

Journal

INVESTIGATIVE OPHTHALMOLOGY & VISUAL SCIENCE
Volume 57, Issue 9, Pages OCT196-OCT203

Publisher

ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/iovs.15-18886

Keywords

optical coherence tomography; magnetic resonance imaging; asphericity; myopia

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, MD, USA) [R01-EY024312, R01-dEY014685]
  2. Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. (New York, NY, USA)

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PURPOSE. Posterior eye shape assessment by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is used to study myopia. We tested the hypothesis that optical coherence tomography (OCT), as an alternative, could measure posterior eye shape similarly to MRI. METHODS. Macular spectral-domain OCT and brain MRI images previously acquired as part of the Singapore Epidemiology of Eye Diseases study were analyzed. The right eye in the MRI and OCT images was automatically segmented. Optical coherence tomography segmentations were corrected for optical and display distortions requiring biometry data. The segmentations were fitted to spheres and ellipsoids to obtain the posterior eye radius of curvature (R-c) and asphericity (Q(xz)). The differences in R-c and Q(xz) measured by MRI and OCT were tested using paired t-tests. Categorical assignments of prolateness or oblateness using Q(xz) were compared. RESULTS. Fifty-two subjects (67.8 +/- 5.6 years old) with spherical equivalent refraction from vertical bar 0.50 to -5.38 were included. The mean paired difference between MRI and original OCT posterior eye R-c was 24.03 +/- 46.49 mm (P = 0.0005). For corrected OCT images, the difference in R-c decreased to -0.23 +/- 2.47 mm (P = 0.51). The difference between MRI and OCT asphericity, Q(xz), was -0.052 +/- 0.343 (P = 0.28). However, categorical agreement was only moderate (kappa = 0.50). CONCLUSIONS. Distortion-corrected OCT measurements of R-c and Q(xz) were not statistically significantly different from MRI, although the moderate categorical agreement suggests that individual differences remained. This study provides evidence that with distortion correction, noninvasive office-based OCT could potentially be used instead of MRI for the study of posterior eye shape.

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