Expanding a photographic grading system for trachomatous scarring

Author:

Nayel Yassin12ORCID,Muñoz Beatriz E1,Mkocha Harran3,West Sheila K1ORCID,Wolle Meraf A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dana Center for Preventive Ophthalmology, Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore 21287, MD , USA

2. Department of Family Medicine , Sea Mar Marysville Family Medicine Residency, Sea Mar Community Health Centers, Marysville 98270, WA , USA

3. Kongwa Trachoma Project , Kongwa, United Republic of Tanzania

Abstract

Abstract Background The purpose was to assess an expansion of a previously published photographic four-step severity grading scale for trachomatous scarring (TS). Methods Images of everted eyelids of adult women in Tanzania were graded for the presence and severity of TS. The previous S3 grade was subdivided into two categories: S3A, one-third to <50% of the upper eyelid conjunctiva scarred; and S3B, 50% to <90%. The reliability and ease of use were evaluated. This new categorisation was then applied to images taken of the same women 5 y prior to evaluate whether it could help detect previously undetected progression. Results In total, 142 eyes at baseline and 418 eyes at follow-up after 5 y were graded as S3. Interobserver agreement using the expanded scarring grading scale was a kappa of 0.86. At baseline, 51 (35.9%) eyes were S3A and 91 (64.1%) were S3B. At follow-up after 5 y, 36.6% of the eyes that were previously documented as not having progressed were now detected as having progressed from S3A to S3B. S3B images were more likely to progress to S4 compared with S3A (OR 4.6, 95% CI 2.1 to 9.9). Conclusions Adding S3A and S3B is reliable and detects more scarring progression. It will be beneficial for future studies analysing TS in photographs.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine,Health (social science)

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