Home-monitoring for neovascular age-related macular degeneration in older adults within the UK: the MONARCH diagnostic accuracy study

Most neovascular age-related macular degeneration treatments involve long-term follow-up of disease activity. Home monitoring would reduce the burden on patients and those they depend on for transport, and release clinic appointments for other patients. The study aimed to evaluate three home-monitor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health technology assessment (Winchester, England) England), 2024-07, Vol.28 (32), p.1-136
Hauptverfasser: Hogg, Ruth E, Wickens, Robin, O'Connor, Sean, Gidman, Eleanor, Ward, Elizabeth, Treanor, Charlene, Peto, Tunde, Burton, Ben, Knox, Paul, Lotery, Andrew J, Sivaprasad, Sobha, Donnelly, Michael, Rogers, Chris A, Reeves, Barnaby C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most neovascular age-related macular degeneration treatments involve long-term follow-up of disease activity. Home monitoring would reduce the burden on patients and those they depend on for transport, and release clinic appointments for other patients. The study aimed to evaluate three home-monitoring tests for patients to use to detect active neovascular age-related macular degeneration compared with diagnosing active neovascular age-related macular degeneration by hospital follow-up. There were five objectives: Estimate the accuracy of three home-monitoring tests to detect active neovascular age-related macular degeneration. Determine the acceptability of home monitoring to patients and carers and adherence to home monitoring. Explore whether inequalities exist in recruitment, participants' ability to self-test and their adherence to weekly testing during follow-up. Provide pilot data about the accuracy of home monitoring to detect conversion to neovascular age-related macular degeneration in fellow eyes of patients with unilateral neovascular age-related macular degeneration. Describe challenges experienced when implementing home-monitoring tests. Diagnostic test accuracy cohort study, stratified by time since starting treatment. Six United Kingdom Hospital Eye Service macular clinics (Belfast, Liverpool, Moorfields, James Paget, Southampton, Gloucester). Patients with at least one study eye being monitored by hospital follow-up. Detection of active neovascular age-related macular degeneration by an ophthalmologist at hospital follow-up. KeepSight Journal: paper-based near-vision tests presented as word puzzles. MyVisionTrack®: electronic test, viewed on a tablet device. MultiBit: electronic test, viewed on a tablet device. Participants provided test scores weekly. Raw scores between hospital follow-ups were summarised as averages. Two hundred and ninety-seven patients (mean age 74.9 years) took part. At least one hospital follow-up was available for 317 study eyes, including 9 second eyes that became eligible during follow-up, in 261 participants (1549 complete visits). Median testing frequency was three times/month. Estimated areas under receiver operating curves were < 0.6 for all index tests, and only KeepSight Journal summary score was significantly associated with the lesion activity (odds ratio = 3.48, 95% confidence interval 1.09 to 11.13,  = 0.036). Older age and worse deprivation for home address were associated with lower participation (χ  =
ISSN:2046-4924
1366-5278
2046-4924
DOI:10.3310/CYRA9912