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Abstract #15187 Published in IGR 8-4

The probability of glaucoma from ocular hypertension determined by ophthalmologists in comparison to a risk calculator

Mansberger SL; Cioffi GA
Journal of Glaucoma 2006; 15: 426-431

See also comment(s) by Erik Greve


OBJECTIVE: To investigate the ability of ophthalmologists to estimate an individual's risk of converting from ocular hypertension to glaucoma, and to compare these estimates to a risk calculator. DESIGN: Cross-Sectional Survey. METHODS: Fifty-one ophthalmologists estimated the probability of developing glaucoma of 4 factitious patients with ocular hypertension, after a didactic review of the Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study (OHTS) results. We compared the physician estimates to the probability estimates of a risk calculator on the basis of the multivariate Cox proportional hazard model of the OHTS results. RESULTS: The average estimates given by the ophthalmologists (mean probability ± SD) of developing glaucoma in 5 years for patient no. 1, patient no. 2, patient no. 3, and patient no. 4 were 6.5% ± 8.4 (range 1 to 50), 30.6% ± 20.5 (range 1 to 100), 7.1% ± 5.1 (range 0 to 20), and 21.1% ± 17.3 (range 1 to 80), respectively. The risk calculator estimated the probability of glaucoma in these same patients to be 13.7%, 53.8%, 5.1%, and 41.9%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: The ophthalmologists showed a high range of estimates for the probability of developing glaucoma in the same ocular hypertensive patients. This may lead to either under or over treatment of patients. Clinicians need a more exact method to determine the probability of glaucoma from ocular hypertension.

Dr. S.L. Mansberger, Glaucoma Service, Devers Eye Institute, Portland, OR 97210, USA


Classification:

9.2.1 Ocular hypertension (Part of: 9 Clinical forms of glaucomas > 9.2 Primary open angle glaucomas)



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