Telemedicine approaches to evaluating acute-phase retinopathy of prematurity: study design.
Publication/Presentation Date
8-1-2014
Abstract
PURPOSE: Detecting sight-threatening retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) relies on a diagnostic examination (DE) performed by an experienced ophthalmologist. An alternative may be a telemedicine system where retinal images of at-risk infants are graded by readers to determine features of ROP indicating the need for a DE.
METHODS: The multicenter Telemedicine Approaches to Evaluating Acute-phase ROP (e-ROP) Study is a cohort study of 2000 infants with birth weights < 1251 g. At each visit, ophthalmologists perform DEs and non-physician imagers obtain iris and five retinal images with the disc positioned in the center, right, left, up and down. Images are uploaded to a secure server for grading by non-physician readers for the detection of plus disease, stage 3 ROP and/or zone I disease, any of which indicates "referral-warranted ROP" (RW-ROP). Images from all infants with RW-ROP and a random sample of infants without RW-ROP (based on DEs) are selected for grading. Gradings are compared to DEs to determine the validity and evaluate reliability, feasibility, safety, and cost-effectiveness of the telemedicine system.
RESULTS: e-ROP is conducted in 12 Clinical Centers in the US and Canada with Study Headquarters, the Data Coordinating Center and the Image Reading Center in Philadelphia and the ROP Data Center in Oklahoma City. A total of 27 study center coordinators, 34 ophthalmologists, 26 imagers, and 4 readers have been certified. All study data are submitted using a secure web-based system.
CONCLUSION: The design and findings of this study will be useful to conduct other ROP studies or evaluate telemedicine for other diseases.
Volume
21
Issue
4
First Page
256
Last Page
267
ISSN
1744-5086
Published In/Presented At
Graham E Quinn, & e-ROP Cooperative Group (2014). Telemedicine approaches to evaluating acute-phase retinopathy of prematurity: study design. Ophthalmic epidemiology, 21(4), 256–267. https://doi.org/10.3109/09286586.2014.926940
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
24955738
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article