Brown Jamie C, Goldstein Judith E, Chan Tiffany L, Massof Robert, Ramulu Pradeep
Wilmer Eye Institute, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institute, Baltimore, Maryland.
The Lions Vision Research and Rehabilitation Center, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institute, Baltimore, Maryland.
Ophthalmology. 2014 Aug;121(8):1655-62.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2014.02.030. Epub 2014 Apr 24.
To characterize functional complaints of new low-vision rehabilitation patients.
Prospective observational study.
The Low Vision Rehabilitation Outcomes Study recruited 819 patients between 2008 and 2011 from 28 clinical centers in the United States.
New patients referred for low-vision rehabilitation were asked, "What are your chief complaints about your vision?" before their appointment. Full patient statements were transcribed as free text. Two methods assessed whether statements indicated difficulty in each of 13 functional categories: (1) assessment by 2 masked clinicians reading the statement, and (2) a computerized search of the text for specific words or word fragments. Logistic regression models were used to predict the influence of age, gender, and visual acuity on the likelihood of reporting a complaint in each functional category.
Prevalence and risk factors for patient concerns within various functional categories.
Reading was the most common functional complaint (66.4% of patients). Other functional difficulties expressed by at least 10% of patients included driving (27.8%), using visual assistive equipment (17.5%), mobility (16.3%), performing in-home activities (15.1%), lighting and glare (11.7%), and facial recognition and social interactions (10.3%). Good agreement was noted between the masked clinician graders and the computerized algorithm for categorization of functional complaints (median κ of 0.84 across the 13 categories). Multivariate logistic regression models demonstrated that the likelihood of reading difficulties increased mildly with age (odds ratio, 1.4 per 10-year increment in age; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.6), but did not differ with visual acuity (P = 0.09). Additionally, men were more likely to report driving difficulties and difficulties related to lighting, whereas women were more likely to report difficulty with either in-home activities or facial recognition or social interaction (P<0.05 for all). Mobility concerns, defined as walking difficulty and out-of-home activities, showed no relationship to gender, age, or visual acuity.
Reading was the most commonly reported difficulty, regardless of the patient's diagnosis. Neither visual acuity nor gender were predictive of reading concerns, although, age showed a small effect. Addressing reading rehabilitation should be a cornerstone of low-vision therapy.
描述新的低视力康复患者的功能障碍主诉。
前瞻性观察研究。
低视力康复结局研究于2008年至2011年期间从美国28个临床中心招募了819名患者。
在预约之前,询问转诊至低视力康复科的新患者:“您对自己的视力主要有哪些抱怨?”完整的患者陈述被转录为自由文本。有两种方法评估陈述是否表明在13个功能类别中的每一类存在困难:(1)由2名盲法临床医生阅读陈述进行评估,(2)对文本进行计算机搜索以查找特定单词或单词片段。使用逻辑回归模型预测年龄、性别和视力对在每个功能类别中报告障碍可能性的影响。
各功能类别中患者关注问题的患病率和危险因素。
阅读是最常见的功能障碍主诉(66.4%的患者)。至少10%的患者表达的其他功能困难包括驾驶(27.8%)、使用视觉辅助设备(17.5%)、行动能力(16.3%)、进行家庭活动(15.1%)、照明和眩光(11.7%)以及面部识别和社交互动(10.3%)。在功能障碍主诉分类方面,盲法临床医生评分者与计算机算法之间存在良好的一致性(13个类别中κ中位数为0.84)。多变量逻辑回归模型表明,阅读困难的可能性随年龄略有增加(年龄每增加10岁,优势比为1.4;95%置信区间为1.3 - 1.6),但与视力无关(P = 0.09)。此外,男性更有可能报告驾驶困难以及与照明相关的困难,而女性更有可能报告家庭活动、面部识别或社交互动方面的困难(所有P<0.05)。行动能力问题,定义为行走困难和户外出行活动,与性别、年龄或视力无关。
无论患者的诊断如何,阅读是最常报告的困难。视力和性别均不能预测阅读问题,尽管年龄有较小影响。解决阅读康复问题应是低视力治疗的基石。