Glaucoma-Associated Visual Task Performance and Vision-Related Quality of Life in South India

Chelsea L. Reighard, Manju R. Pillai, Sujani Shroff, George L. Spaeth, Stephen G. Schilling, Sheryl S. Wizov, Joshua D. Stein, Alan L. Robin, Vidya Raja, Joshua R. Ehrlich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: Performance-based measures may provide an objective assessment of how glaucoma affects daily functioning. We sought to validate a clinically applicable performance-based measure of visual ability for patients with glaucoma in South India and describe its relationship to clinical and patient-reported outcomes. Design: Cross-sectional validation study. Participants: One hundred forty-five participants with glaucoma recruited at Aravind Eye Hospital. Methods: We modified the Compressed Assessment of Ability Related to Vision (CAARV), a performance-based measure validated in the United States, to be culturally relevant in South India. Participants underwent a series of tests, including the Indian CAARV (I-CAARV), Indian Visual Functioning Questionnaire (IND-VFQ), Spaeth/Richman Contrast Sensitivity (SPARCS) test, standard automated perimetry, and visual acuity (VA) assessment. Factor analysis and Rasch modeling were used to validate the I-CAARV. Correlations between the I-CAARV results and other outcomes were evaluated. Main Outcome Measure: Psychometric properties of the I-CAARV for individuals with glaucoma in South India. Results: The study included 142 participants (51.7% women; mean age, 56.4 years). Average presenting VA and visual field (VF) mean deviation (MD) in the better-seeing eye were 0.26 logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution and –6.57 dB, respectively. The 4 tasks of the I-CAARV were found to measure a single underlying construct. Rasch analysis of the I-CAARV revealed that the outcome measure had moderate reliability, good construct and content validity, and fair measurement precision. Tasks were well targeted to the study sample. Rasch-calibrated scores on the I-CAARV were correlated significantly with Rasch-calibrated IND-VFQ scores (r = –0.54) and VF MD, presenting VA, best-corrected VA, and SPARCS contrast sensitivity in both the better-seeing eye (r = 0.60, r = –0.51, r = –0.53, and r = 0.76, respectively) and worse-seeing eye (r = 0.48, r = –0.61, r = –0.46, r = 0.69, respectively). Conclusions: The I-CAARV is a valid performance-based measure of vision-dependent functioning in glaucoma in South India. This study also found that I-CAARV task performance was correlated strongly with contrast sensitivity and suggested that performance-based and patient-reported outcomes are related but distinct measures of the impact of glaucoma on functioning and vision-related quality of life. Future studies are needed to determine the sensitivity of the I-CAARV to detect changes because of disease progression that are relevant to functioning and vision-related quality of life.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)357-363
Number of pages7
JournalOphthalmology Glaucoma
Volume2
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2019

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ophthalmology

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