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https://doi.org/10.3109/09286586.2011.594205
Title: | Cataract prevalence varies substantially with assessment systems: Comparison of clinical and photographic grading in a population-based study | Authors: | Tan, A.C.S. Wang, J.J. Lamoureux, E.L. Wong, W. Mitchell, P. Li, J. Tan, A.G. Wong, T.Y. |
Keywords: | Cataract grading LOCS III Population studies Prevalence Wisconsin grading system |
Issue Date: | Aug-2011 | Citation: | Tan, A.C.S., Wang, J.J., Lamoureux, E.L., Wong, W., Mitchell, P., Li, J., Tan, A.G., Wong, T.Y. (2011-08). Cataract prevalence varies substantially with assessment systems: Comparison of clinical and photographic grading in a population-based study. Ophthalmic Epidemiology 18 (4) : 164-170. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3109/09286586.2011.594205 | Abstract: | Purpose: Cataract is the major cause of blindness worldwide yet there is no consensus on its assessment and definition. This study compares age-related cataract prevalence derived from two commonly used methods: clinical assessment using the Lens Opacity Classification System (LOCS III) and photographic grading using the Wisconsin Cataract Grading System (Wisconsin System). Methods: The Singapore Malay Eye Study is a population-based study of 3,280 Singapore Malays aged 4080 years. Presence of nuclear, cortical and posterior sub-capsular cataract was assessed clinically during slit-lamp examination using LOCS III, and via slit-lamp and retro-illumination photographic grading using the Wisconsin System. Analyses were conducted to determine agreement in cataract prevalence estimates between the two grading Systems and approaches. Results: Poor agreement was found between severity levels of the two grading scales for all three cataract types. Using currently accepted cut-offs to define nuclear (≥4 on both LOCS III and Wisconsin System), cortical (≥2 in LOCS III, ≥25% in Wisconsin) and PSC (≥2 in LOCS III, ≥5 % in Wisconsin) cataract, the LOCS III overestimated the prevalence of significant cataract as compared to the Wisconsin System, with nuclear cataract prevalence, 27.5% (LOCS III) versus 17.0% (Wisconsin System), cortical cataract prevalence, 27.9% versus 7.0% and posterior sub-capsular cataract prevalence, 7.8% versus 5.1%. Conclusion: The prevalence of cataract in a population varies substantially by measurement methods, with systematically different estimates found using the two most frequent cataract grading systems. This study re-emphasizes the need for global standards to assess and define cataract for epidemiologic and clinical studies. © 2011 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc. | Source Title: | Ophthalmic Epidemiology | URI: | http://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/109226 | ISSN: | 09286586 | DOI: | 10.3109/09286586.2011.594205 |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications |
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