James S. Wolffsohn , Sònia Travé-Huarte , Fiona Stapleton , Laura E. Downie , Marc-Matthias Schulze , Sarah Guthrie , Ulrike Stahl , Michael T.M. Wang , Jennifer P. Craig
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Aim
Disease misdiagnosis is more likely if standardised diagnostic criteria are not used. This study systematically examined the effect on diagnosing dry eye disease (DED), when tests for evaluating tear film homeostasis were included or excluded from a multi-test protocol.
Method
For 1,427 participants across five sites, data for the full suite of diagnostic tests defined in the Tear Film and Ocular Surface Society Dry Eye Workshop II (TFOS DEWS II) Diagnostic Methodology report algorithm were evaluated; diagnostic sensitivity was calculated when individual signs were removed, and when different combinations of signs were required.
Results
Evaluating just one of the three TFOS DEWS II homeostatic signs resulted in between 12.3 % and 36.2 % of patients who met the DED diagnostic criteria not being assigned this diagnosis. While comprehensive ocular surface staining evaluation, comprising of corneal, conjunctival and lid margin staining, in combination with symptoms had the highest sensitivity (87.7 %) of the three markers, the sensitivity dropped to 44.6 % if only corneal staining was evaluated. Omitting either non-invasive tear breakup time or tear osmolarity each dropped the sensitivity by <5 %. The prevalence of DED was substantially reduced if a diagnosis required symptoms and two of the three signs to be present (by 43.7 %–61.2 %) and by 65.9 % if all three signs indicating a loss of tear film homeostasis were required. The outcomes of the analysis did not change significantly across differing severities of DED symptoms.
Conclusions
The TFOS DEWS II diagnostic algorithm of symptoms plus assessing for a tear film (non-invasive tear breakup time or tear osmolarity) and ocular surface sign can be considered a robust and appropriate approach for DED diagnosis.
期刊介绍:
The Ocular Surface, a quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal, is an authoritative resource that integrates and interprets major findings in diverse fields related to the ocular surface, including ophthalmology, optometry, genetics, molecular biology, pharmacology, immunology, infectious disease, and epidemiology. Its critical review articles cover the most current knowledge on medical and surgical management of ocular surface pathology, new understandings of ocular surface physiology, the meaning of recent discoveries on how the ocular surface responds to injury and disease, and updates on drug and device development. The journal also publishes select original research reports and articles describing cutting-edge techniques and technology in the field.
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