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Detection of Subclinical Keratoconus With a Validated Alternative Method to Corneal Densitometry

Alejandra Consejo, Marta Jiménez‐García, Ikram Issarti, J. Rozema

2021Translational Vision Science & Technology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose: To enhance the current standards of subclinical keratoconus screening based on the statistical modeling of the pixel intensity distribution of Scheimpflug images. Methods: Scheimpflug corneal tomographies corresponding to 25 corneal meridians of 60 participants were retrospectively collected and divided into three groups: controls (20 eyes), subclinical keratoconus (20 eyes), and clinical keratoconus (20 eyes). Only right eyes were selected. After corneal segmentation, pixel intensities of the stromal tissue were statistically modeled using a Weibull probability density function from which parameter α (pixel brightness) was derived. Further, data were transformed to polar coordinates, smoothed, and interpolated to build a map of the corneal α parameter. The discriminative power of the method was analyzed using receiver operating characteristic curves. Results: The proposed platform-independent method achieved a higher performance in discriminating subclinical keratoconus from control eyes (90.0% sensitivity, 95.0% specificity, 0.97 area under the curve [AUC]) than the standard method (Belin-Ambrósio enhanced ectasia display), which uses only corneal morphometry (85.0% sensitivity, 85.0% specificity, 0.80 AUC). Conclusions: Analysis of light backscatter at the cornea successfully discriminates subclinical keratoconus from control eyes, upgrading the results previously reported in the literature. Translational Relevance: The proposed methodology has the potential to support clinicians in the detection of keratoconus before showing clinical signs.

Topics & Concepts

Scheimpflug principleKeratoconusCorneaOphthalmologyMedicineReceiver operating characteristicSubclinical infectionCorneal topographyPathologyInternal medicineCorneal surgery and disordersOcular Surface and Contact LensCorneal Surgery and Treatments