QUICK
FACTS
The Canadian Ophthalmology Study Group (COSG) has been using PV-WAVE®
to help Queens University Ophthalmology Department Chairman Dr.
Alan F. Cruess do a comparative study to determine if krypton red
treatment really is more effective than the conventional argon green
approach to treat blindness and attack debilitating retinal diseases.
THE PROBLEM
In the old Superman comic books, kryptonite was green, and it was
bad. It was the only thing that could kill the original super hero.
In the world of ophthalmology, the krypton laser is red, and it's
good. In fact, it's the best treatment going for the number-one
cause of blindness in North America, age-related macular degeneration
(AMD). It is also the best way to attack other debilitating retinal
diseases, such as presumed ocular histophasmosis syndrome (OHS).
Or is it? Like a modern-day scientific detective, Margaret Ballantyne,
coordinator of the Canadian Ophthalmology Study Group (COSG), Kingston,
Ontario, has been using a visual data analysis (VDA) software package,
PV-WAVE, developed by Visual Numerics, to help Queens University
Ophthalmology Department Chairman Dr. Alan F. Cruess and his team
answer that question.
The stakes are high -- not only blindness or sight loss for millions
of patients, but potentially millions of dollars in health costs
as well.
In
the early 1980s, it was demonstrated that laser treatment for some
diseases of the retina could prevent people from going blind quickly,
which could occur if the situation is left untreated.
Green laser light was found to have the most appropriate wavelength
for the treatment of lesions outside the area of central vision,
and other research suggested that red laser was more effective for
lesions in the area of central vision, also called the foveal avascular
zone or FAZ. The COSG set out to answer one question: Is red laser
superior to green laser for lesions outside the FAZ?
THE SOLUTION
Krypton red versus argon green? Researchers at The John Hopkins
University in Baltimore asked Dr. Cruess and his staff at COSG to
undertake a comparative study to determine if krypton red treatment
really was more effective than the conventional argon green approach.
Dr. Cruess treated a random group of patients, some with the new
krypton laser and some with the old argon laser. The patients were
closely monitored after treatment, and voluminous data were gathered
concerning the relative progress of the two groups.
It was at this point that Ballantyne and visual data analysis entered
the project. The data collected were in the form of thousands of
retinal photographs. Using PV-WAVE, Ballantyne was able to compare
successive photographs of an individual patient to determine the
rate of growth of laser scars. While the lesions are the preexisting
medical condition or symptom of the disease, the scars are introduced
during the laser treatment. Both the lesions and the laser scars
were monitored in the project.
"In both diseases [AMD and OHS], the retina becomes hypoxic,
meaning it desires oxygen," Ballantyne explained. Its
not getting enough, so it creates its own blood vessels to look
for the oxygen. These new vessels can cause hemorrhaging, resulting
in lesions that raise the retina slightly, lifting it off its lower
layer. This is what causes the vision to become blurry or wavy."
But tracking the exact placement and growth of these minute lesions
through photographs requires absolute precision. For the purposes
for the study, only patients with lesions in a minute band, some
2,000 microns wide surrounding the fovea, or center of the retina,
were used. Ballantyne, using an Imapro QCS-35 scanner attached to
a UNIX workstation running PV-WAVE analyzed the photographic data.
Measurements were compared with data generated from an enhanced
image on PV-WAVE, and a cursor was used to draw around the edges
of retinal scars. According to Ballantyne, such detailed analysis
would be impossible without this technology.
"It couldn't be done. If I want to look at the progression
of scar growth, I can take a couple of patients and scan all their
photographs in, bring one up on screen and look at the percentage
area the lesion is covering," Ballantyne said. "Then I
can bring up a photo that was taken of the same patient three months
later and get the updated percentage area of the lesion. PV-WAVE
provides us with all of those numbers and allows us to visually
configure our findings in a vast number of ways to calculate the
progression of the disease and treatment."
"PV-WAVE gives us the ability to utilize our archived material
and view it with high-resolution precision," said Dr. Cruess.
"In the future, we hope to develop a package in which images
from the eye are directly enhanced and then analyzed by the same
sophisticated software."
At one point, Ballantyne received assistance from a technical support
engineer at Visual Numerics to adapt the software to the exact needs
of the study.
"Visual Numerics helped me write a custom program to refine
the results of the study," said Ballantyne. "When I was
presenting our findings using PV-WAVE to the Association for Research
and Vision at its Florida conference, the doctors didn't think that
the photographs taken on one day were comparable with the same patient
photographed on another day -- the patient probably didn't sit in
exactly the same place when he was photographed. They suggested
I find some program to account for the change in position, so that
I truly was comparing identical areas.
"Visual Numerics helped us design a program with PV-WAVE that
allowed us to bring up the first photo of the patient, look at the
healthy blood vessels flowing through the retina and match them
up with the vessels from the same patient's photo months later.
Then I could say the lesion covers a larger area six months later
and show that indeed it was bigger, that it didn't just appear so
because it was from a different camera angle."
RETURN ON INVESTMENT
"We found that we cannot agree with a popular position that
the new krypton red treatment is better," Ballantyne announced.
"In fact, our research bears out that the argon green laser
is actually more effective than the krypton red laser in preserving
visual acuity for AMD patients."
And what does this mean for doctors treating these patients?
"It means that if you have argon green as your mode of therapy
in your clinic, keep it. There's no compelling reason to go and
buy an expensive krypton laser. They're more expensive and harder
to get."
This is good news for anyone working in the field of ophthalmology,
and for their patients as well. Ballantyne sees it as a particularly
welcome result for her homeland of Canada. "In Canada, it's
much more difficult to pay for these lasers, because we have socialized
medicine and the government has to say Yes to everything. This is
good news for our government, because they don't need to run out
and supply our health-care infrastructure with new lasers. And taxpayers
can be happy about the cost savings."
Through the power of visual data analysis, Ballantyne's group has
been able to show that an existing therapy is not outdated and does
not need to be replaced.
WORLD CLASS PRODUCTS, SERVICES,
AND SUPPORT
Visual Numerics has provided technical software
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