Volumetric Measurement of Subretinal Blebs Using Microscope-Integrated Optical Coherence Tomography
Author(s) -
S. Tammy Hsu,
Hesham Gabr,
Christian Viehland,
Karim Sleiman,
Hoan T. Ngo,
Oscar CarrascoZevallos,
Lejla Vajzovic,
Ryan P. McNabb,
Sandra S. Stinnett,
Joseph A. Izatt,
Anthony N. Kuo,
Cynthia A. Toth
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
translational vision science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.508
H-Index - 21
ISSN - 2164-2591
DOI - 10.1167/tvst.7.2.19
Subject(s) - optical coherence tomography , reproducibility , intraclass correlation , medicine , volume (thermodynamics) , biomedical engineering , microscope , nuclear medicine , ophthalmology , optics , mathematics , pathology , physics , statistics , quantum mechanics
Purpose We advance studies of subretinal treatments by developing a microscope-integrated optical coherence tomography (MIOCT) image-based method for measuring the volume of therapeutics delivered into the subretinal space. Methods A MIOCT image-based volume measurement method was developed and assessed for accuracy and reproducibility by imaging an object of known size in model eyes. This method then was applied to subretinal blebs created by injection of diluted triamcinolone. Bleb volumes obtained from MIOCT were compared to the intended injection volume and the surgeon's estimation of leakage. Results Validation of the image-based volume measurement method showed accuracy to ±1.0 μL (6.0% of measured volume) with no statistically significant variation under different imaging settings. When this method was applied to subretinal blebs, four of 11 blebs without surgeon-observed leakage yielded a mean volume of 32 ± 12.5 μL, in contrast to the intended 50 μL volume injected from the delivery device. This constituted a mean difference of −18 μL (mean percent error, 36 ± 25%). For all 11 blebs, the surgeon's estimations of leakage were significantly different from and showed no correlation with the volume loss based on image-based volume measurements ( P < 0.001, paired t -test; intraclass correlation = 0). Conclusions We validated an accurate and reproducible method for measuring subretinal volumes using MIOCT. Use of this method revealed that the intended volume might not be delivered into the subretinal space. MIOCT can allow for accurate assessment of subretinal dose delivered, which may have therapeutic implications in evaluating the efficacy and toxicity of subretinal therapies. Translational Relevance Use of MIOCT can provide feedback on the accuracy of subretinal injection volumes delivered.
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