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[Preprint]. 2024 Aug 14:2024.03.24.24304809. Originally published 2024 Mar 28. [Version 2] doi: 10.1101/2024.03.24.24304809

Quantification of Fundus Autofluorescence Features in a Molecularly Characterized Cohort of More Than 3500 Inherited Retinal Disease Patients from the United Kingdom

William Woof, Thales A C de Guimarães, Saoud Al-Khuzaei, Malena Daich Varela, Sagnik Sen, Pallavi Bagga, Bernardo Mendes, Mital Shah, Paula Burke, David Parry, Siying Lin, Gunjan Naik, Biraja Ghoshal, Bart Liefers, Dun Jack Fu, Michalis Georgiou, Quang Nguyen, Alan Sousa da Silva, Yichen Liu, Yu Fujinami-Yokokawa, Dayyanah Sumodhee, Praveen Patel, Jennifer Furman, Ismail Moghul, Mariya Moosajee, Juliana Sallum, Samantha R De Silva, Birgit Lorenz, Frank Holz, Kaoru Fujinami, Andrew R Webster, Omar Mahroo, Susan M Downes, Savita Madhusudhan, Konstantinos Balaskas, Michel Michaelides, Nikolas Pontikos
PMCID: PMC10996753  PMID: 38585957

Abstract

Purpose

To quantify relevant fundus autofluorescence (FAF) image features cross-sectionally and longitudinally in a large cohort of inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) patients.

Design

Retrospective study of imaging data (55-degree blue-FAF on Heidelberg Spectralis) from patients.

Participants

Patients with a clinical and molecularly confirmed diagnosis of IRD who have undergone FAF 55-degree imaging at Moorfields Eye Hospital (MEH) and the Royal Liverpool Hospital (RLH) between 2004 and 2019.

Methods

Five FAF features of interest were defined: vessels, optic disc, perimacular ring of increased signal (ring), relative hypo-autofluorescence (hypo-AF) and hyper-autofluorescence (hyper-AF). Features were manually annotated by six graders in a subset of patients based on a defined grading protocol to produce segmentation masks to train an AI model, AIRDetect, which was then applied to the entire MEH imaging dataset.

Main Outcome Measures

Quantitative FAF imaging features including area in mm 2 and vessel metrics, were analysed cross-sectionally by gene and age, and longitudinally to determine rate of progression. AIRDetect feature segmentation and detection were validated with Dice score and precision/recall, respectively.

Results

A total of 45,749 FAF images from 3,606 IRD patients from MEH covering 170 genes were automatically segmented using AIRDetect. Model-grader Dice scores for disc, hypo-AF, hyper-AF, ring and vessels were respectively 0.86, 0.72, 0.69, 0.68 and 0.65. The five genes with the largest hypo-AF areas were CHM , ABCC6 , ABCA4 , RDH12 , and RPE65 , with mean per-patient areas of 41.5, 30.0, 21.9, 21.4, and 15.1 mm 2 . The five genes with the largest hyper-AF areas were BEST1 , CDH23 , RDH12 , MYO7A , and NR2E3 , with mean areas of 0.49, 0.45, 0.44, 0.39, and 0.34 mm 2 respectively. The five genes with largest ring areas were CDH23 , NR2E3 , CRX , EYS and MYO7A, with mean areas of 3.63, 3.32, 2.84, 2.39, and 2.16 mm 2 . Vessel density was found to be highest in EFEMP1 , BEST1 , TIMP3 , RS1 , and PRPH2 (10.6%, 10.3%, 9.8%, 9.7%, 8.9%) and was lower in Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) and Leber Congenital Amaurosis genes. Longitudinal analysis of decreasing ring area in four RP genes ( RPGR, USH2A, RHO, EYS ) found EYS to be the fastest progressor at -0.18 mm 2 /year.

Conclusions

We have conducted the first large-scale cross-sectional and longitudinal quantitative analysis of FAF features across a diverse range of IRDs using a novel AI approach.

Full Text Availability

The license terms selected by the author(s) for this preprint version do not permit archiving in PMC. The full text is available from the preprint server.


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