Myopia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Validation Study of Mobile Technologies for Assessing Visual Acuity and Eye Health Among Older Adults in India
Study compares four portable vision measurement and eye-imaging technologies in terms of accuracy and time and ease of use with older adult (ages 40-100) participants in a developing-country setting (India). Specifically, the five portable devices will be measured against the baseline of the traditional eye-examination techniques, including the use of eye charts and phoropters.
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are a large and increasingly costly problem for India.
Recent research estimates that NCDs could cost the Indian economy US$6.2 trillion from
2012-2030 if left unaddressed. For some NCDs, new solutions will need to be developed for
diagnosis and treatment, while, for others, the necessary interventions exist but are not
readily available to all who need them. Visual impairment is one area of health in which
limited access to diagnostic and treatment technologies jeopardizes the health and economic
well-being of the population. This is particularly true in India, where the population is
rapidly aging and, despite the presence of some high-quality medical facilities, there
remains a large burden of unaddressed visual impairment.
Loss of visual acuity can negatively impact individual and household income by reducing
productivity or hours worked among the visually impaired; it can also affect economic
wellbeing via the need for caretakers. There are two key tests that determine visual acuity
and measure vision loss:
1. Basic visual acuity (BVA), which is assessed using the naked eye or, when applicable,
eyeglasses, and
2. Best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), which uses refraction to determine eyeglass/contact
lens prescription.
In addition, diagnosing vision-hindering eye conditions requires specific medications or
surgical procedures. Diagnosis of glaucoma, cataracts, or diabetic retinopathy typically
requires a physician to examine a patient's retinas, corneas, and/or pupils at close range
using specialized equipment, in conjunction with the visual acuity tests described above.
BCVA tests typically require heavy, cumbersome, and expensive equipment such as phoropters
(instruments that measure the refractive state of the eye). Likewise, eye diseases typically
require the use of specialized equipment such as slit lamp microscopes, ophthalmoscopes, and
tonometers.
However, the recent and anticipated availability of affordable and lightweight portable
technologies which can be used both by medical professionals and by trained laypeople has
made eye testing easier and faster. This study will validate a number of new handheld devices
developed for visual acuity measurement and retinal imaging.
This study explores testing for visual acuity and other impairments like diabetic
retinopathy, glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and cataract without the use
of traditional stationery and expensive instruments such as phoropters and conventional
autorefractors and at a comparatively low cost. If the devices are proven able to accurately
evaluate visual acuity and produce high-quality retinal images that can be used to aid
diagnosis, it will be a breakthrough in reducing barriers of access to eye care facilities
encountered by the majority of the rural population in India and other developing countries.
Also, since these devices are convenient and relatively easy to use, they can be easily used
in household/community surveys involving vision measurement; the investigators are proposing
to perform data collection for this study in India partially in order to investigate the
potential for use of one or more of handheld devices in upcoming waves of the Longitudinal
Aging Study in India (Protocol Number 16715), a nationally-representative aging and
retirement study that collects data on multiple dimensions of aging, including socioeconomic,
cognitive, and health indicators with the aim of informing national policy and practice
relating to older adults. Specifically, the study involves an extensive biomarkers module
which includes direct measurement of multiple medical and anthropometric indicators, such as
blood pressure, grip strength, lung function, height, and weight. The current version of the
biomarkers module calls for the use of a traditional eye chart to measure BVA; however,
future versions of the study would greatly benefit from the use, if feasible, of portable and
inexpensive devices which would allow researchers to collect richer and more accurate data on
visual acuity and/or eye conditions and therefore provide a more detailed picture on older
adults' eye health, as well as the predictors and correlates of eye health, on a national
level.
Through the data gained from this study, the investigators hope to be able to develop useful
recommendations for researchers, community health organizations, and health care
professionals whose studies and patients would benefit from access to relatively low-cost
portable vision measurement and retinal imaging devices. In particular, Indian consumers will
have access to all devices pending market approval.
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