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Ultra‐widefield fundus photography for radiation therapy planning of ocular tumours
Author(s) -
Mathis Thibaud,
Espensen Charlotte A.,
Caujolle JeanPierre,
Herault Joel,
Fog Lotte S.,
Maschi Celia,
Kodjikian Laurent,
Baillif Stephanie,
Kiilgaard Jens F.,
Thariat Juliette
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acta ophthalmologica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.534
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1755-3768
pISSN - 1755-375X
DOI - 10.1111/aos.14250
Subject(s) - fundus photography , medicine , posterior pole , optic disc , ophthalmology , distortion (music) , fundus (uterus) , optic nerve , nuclear medicine , physics , visual acuity , glaucoma , fluorescein angiography , amplifier , optoelectronics , cmos
Purpose The use of planar ultra‐widefield fundus photography ( UWF ) may result in distortions and inaccurate measurement. The aim of the study was to evaluate the accuracy of UWF instead of the standard narrow field ( SF ) for the treatment planning phase of ocular tumours. Methods Distortions between conformal SF and UWF were assessed in 43 patients with choroidal melanoma treated with either proton therapy or brachytherapy. imagej software was used to measure distortion. Results The median interquartile range ([ IQR ]) distortion for all cases was 3.7% [1.7–10.8]. For cases with tumours within 6 mm of the optic disc, distortions appeared clinically nonsignificant. For peripheral and/or large tumours, significantly larger distortions were observed on UWF (median 4.4% [2.7–22.6] for tumours ≥6 mm from the optic disc versus 3.3% [1.6–9.9] for those <6 mm, p = 0.04). Images can be subdivided into three groups: minimal distortion (79.1% of eyes), similar level of major distortion for both measured distances (11.6%) and distortion with unequal level of distortion between the measured distances (9.3%). Conclusion Distortions with UWF appeared minimal in posterior regions of the fundus and increased with the distance from the posterior pole. UWF could therefore be used for treatment planning of ocular tumours as the planned radiation dose to the macula and optic disc are not impacted.