Healthy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optical Coherence Tomography Comparative Study
This study, conducted at the NIH Clinical Center and the University of Wisconsin University,
will compare measurements obtained using older and newer models of a machine called an
optical coherence tomography (OCT) scanner. This instrument uses a beam of light to measure
the thickness of the retina, the light-sensitive inner lining of the back of the eye. OCT
measurements will be done in multicenter clinical trials of new treatments for disorders
that cause vision loss, such as macular edema. Because some centers in these studies will
use the older OCT model and some the newer one, it is necessary to determine whether the two
models give comparable results.
People 18 years of age and older in the following categories may be eligible for this study:
- People with diabetes, with or without macular edema;
- People with other retinal disease, such as uveitis or vein occlusion in the retina;
- People with no history of eye disease who have a normal retina.
Participants will have the following tests and procedures:
- Eye examination to assess vision and eye pressure and to evaluate the retina. The
pupils are dilated with drops for this examination.
- Stereoscopic color fundus photography to examine the back of the eye. Eye drops are
used to enlarge the size of the pupils to allow for a through examination and
photographs of the eye using a special camera that flashes a bright light into the eye.
- OCT to measure retinal thickness. For this procedure, the subject sits in front of a
small screen and looks at a target in the center of the screen while a dim red light
moves across the subject's retina. This test is done first with one model of the OCT
scanner, then the other. Finally, the test is repeated in both eyes with whichever
model was used first.
Patients who are being treated for macular edema will repeat the same tests at their 3-month
visits.
The use of the Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) has increased markedly over the recent
years for clinical research. It is a promising new method for imaging the retina, measuring
its thickness, and displaying some features of this structure. It is useful in assessing
several eye diseases, including macular edema from various causes and abnormalities of the
vitreoretinal interface. There is a broad clinical consensus that OCT is superior to
stereoscopic color fundus photography, fluorescein angiography, and clinical biomicroscopic
examination in measuring retinal thickness and is capable of documenting fairly small
changes in thickness. OCT is becoming an important part of clinical trials of new treatments
for macular edema. A number of models of the OCT device are commercially available, models
1, 2, and 3. A number of models of OCT have been used in clinical centers involved in such
clinical research. Comparisons of these models 2 and 3 as well as the reproducibility of
these measurements have not been conducted. The main research questions to be answered in
this protocol are the following, in patients with normal retina, diabetic macular edema,
macular edema from other causes, or other vitreoretinal abnormalities:
1. Is the standard deviation of the differences of sequential measurements of retinal
thickness in normal retinas using OCT 3 similar to those measured with the OCT 2?
2. Are there systematic differences between thickness measurements using OCT 2 and OCT 3
in the same eyes?
3. Are there differences in the ability of each machine to image abnormalities within the
vitreoretinal interface?
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