RNFL thickness in MS-associated acute optic neuritis using SD-OCT: critical interpretation and limitations
RNFL thickness in MS-associated acute optic neuritis using SD-OCT: critical interpretation and limitations
PURPOSE: Axonal loss is considered a key prognostic factor in diagnosing and monitoring the progress of multiple sclerosis (MS). The purpose of our research was to determine whether the measurement of retinal nerve fibre layer thickness (RNFLT) as measured with high-resolution spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) differs between optic nerve injury following acute optic neuritis (ON) or following unregistered subclinical axonal damage in patients with MS.
METHODS: High-resolution SD-OCT measurements of RNFLT were initially carried out in the acute phase of ON and again after 3 months, in 25 patients with clinical definite MS and 25 sex- and age-matched healthy controls, all at the University Eye Hospital, Vienna.
RESULTS: Conventional OCT-based RNFLT analysis correctly identified all three patients with initial RNFL swelling. However, only two of three acute ON eyes with a history of ON were registered with RNFLT decrease in seven peripapillary sectors (PPs). The remaining have only been revealed using RNFLT symmetry comparison. Two of 22 (9%) first-episode ON eyes were labelled as pathologic. The number and metric RNFL values of pathologically labelled PPs remained unchanged after 3 months. Our age- and sex-match-based measurement model, with patients with MS being plotted individually and towards the fellow eye, identified all acute ON eyes (with a history of prior ON) with RNFLT reduction in 11 PPs. A global RNFL loss was registered in 36.4% (eight of 22 eyes). However, in 72%, or 16 of 22 ON eyes presenting with first episode of acute ON, a segmental RNFL loss was initially registered in 39 PPs upon baseline examination. The number of PPs with identified axonal decrease increased to a total of 48 PPs within the observational period.
CONCLUSIONS: Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography imaging of identical scanning locations, combined with an optimized scan centring around the optic disc, offers the technological potential of detecting prior, subtle, clinically unregistered optic nerve injury within MS individuals. Significant discrepancy in RNFLT to the potential ON eye may be achieved by comparing OCT metrics with the fellow eye and a sufficient number of age and sex-matched controls.
Acute Disease, Disease Progression, Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting/complications, Optic Nerve/pathology, Optic Neuritis/etiology, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, Optical Coherence/methods, Vision Tests, Visual Field Tests
e451-460
Serbecic, Nermin
3f835554-26ca-4133-bf1e-90124e3aeda4
Beutelspacher, Sven C.
a63a628a-7872-4dd7-b784-97314d5bc2dd
Geitzenauer, Wolfgang
47581468-4f4f-4a06-a589-20b3deb6093b
Kircher, Karl
aec0044f-815a-4100-ba0a-7d3e5114c8c7
Lassmann, Hans
beee5606-98ba-427b-af1b-5a023e724c4e
Reitner, Andreas
68f2c0a4-58a8-4a9f-9716-b1392e9d3038
Khan, Adnan
97374057-d7e7-4849-ac94-c125ba1cc360
Schmidt-Erfurth, Ursula
af993078-6680-4d2a-bc50-ebf6abc3857f
August 2011
Serbecic, Nermin
3f835554-26ca-4133-bf1e-90124e3aeda4
Beutelspacher, Sven C.
a63a628a-7872-4dd7-b784-97314d5bc2dd
Geitzenauer, Wolfgang
47581468-4f4f-4a06-a589-20b3deb6093b
Kircher, Karl
aec0044f-815a-4100-ba0a-7d3e5114c8c7
Lassmann, Hans
beee5606-98ba-427b-af1b-5a023e724c4e
Reitner, Andreas
68f2c0a4-58a8-4a9f-9716-b1392e9d3038
Khan, Adnan
97374057-d7e7-4849-ac94-c125ba1cc360
Schmidt-Erfurth, Ursula
af993078-6680-4d2a-bc50-ebf6abc3857f
Serbecic, Nermin, Beutelspacher, Sven C., Geitzenauer, Wolfgang, Kircher, Karl, Lassmann, Hans, Reitner, Andreas, Khan, Adnan and Schmidt-Erfurth, Ursula
(2011)
RNFL thickness in MS-associated acute optic neuritis using SD-OCT: critical interpretation and limitations.
Acta Ophthalmologica, 89 (5), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1755-3768.2011.02134.x).
Abstract
PURPOSE: Axonal loss is considered a key prognostic factor in diagnosing and monitoring the progress of multiple sclerosis (MS). The purpose of our research was to determine whether the measurement of retinal nerve fibre layer thickness (RNFLT) as measured with high-resolution spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) differs between optic nerve injury following acute optic neuritis (ON) or following unregistered subclinical axonal damage in patients with MS.
METHODS: High-resolution SD-OCT measurements of RNFLT were initially carried out in the acute phase of ON and again after 3 months, in 25 patients with clinical definite MS and 25 sex- and age-matched healthy controls, all at the University Eye Hospital, Vienna.
RESULTS: Conventional OCT-based RNFLT analysis correctly identified all three patients with initial RNFL swelling. However, only two of three acute ON eyes with a history of ON were registered with RNFLT decrease in seven peripapillary sectors (PPs). The remaining have only been revealed using RNFLT symmetry comparison. Two of 22 (9%) first-episode ON eyes were labelled as pathologic. The number and metric RNFL values of pathologically labelled PPs remained unchanged after 3 months. Our age- and sex-match-based measurement model, with patients with MS being plotted individually and towards the fellow eye, identified all acute ON eyes (with a history of prior ON) with RNFLT reduction in 11 PPs. A global RNFL loss was registered in 36.4% (eight of 22 eyes). However, in 72%, or 16 of 22 ON eyes presenting with first episode of acute ON, a segmental RNFL loss was initially registered in 39 PPs upon baseline examination. The number of PPs with identified axonal decrease increased to a total of 48 PPs within the observational period.
CONCLUSIONS: Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography imaging of identical scanning locations, combined with an optimized scan centring around the optic disc, offers the technological potential of detecting prior, subtle, clinically unregistered optic nerve injury within MS individuals. Significant discrepancy in RNFLT to the potential ON eye may be achieved by comparing OCT metrics with the fellow eye and a sufficient number of age and sex-matched controls.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 20 January 2011
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 March 2011
Published date: August 2011
Keywords:
Acute Disease, Disease Progression, Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting/complications, Optic Nerve/pathology, Optic Neuritis/etiology, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, Optical Coherence/methods, Vision Tests, Visual Field Tests
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 432529
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/432529
ISSN: 1755-375X
PURE UUID: e5ed6038-325d-4557-8acc-d7d3ca43254f
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Date deposited: 17 Jul 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:40
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Author:
Nermin Serbecic
Author:
Sven C. Beutelspacher
Author:
Wolfgang Geitzenauer
Author:
Karl Kircher
Author:
Hans Lassmann
Author:
Andreas Reitner
Author:
Ursula Schmidt-Erfurth
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