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Influence of photodynamic therapy for age related macular degeneration upon subjective vision related quality of life
METHODS: Eighty-two consecutive patients receiving PDT in Tasmania, Australia, between May and November 2003 were recruited. In conjunction with a comprehensive clinical examination, the Visual Function-14 (VF-14) questionnaire was administered. Final follow-up occurred between February and March 2005. The VF-14 was scored by traditional summary scoring and by Rasch analysis.
RESULTS: Five of the 82 (6.1%) subjects recruited were excluded from analysis. PDT was performed on average 5.7+/-2.6 times per patient. Raw VF-14 scores tended towards being significantly lower at follow-up than at baseline (67.6+/-27.2 against 64.5+/-27.7; P=0.052), and did significantly deteriorate using a collapsed Rasch analysis (P=0.0102). Following treatment, 38 (47.5%) eyes had lost three or more Snellen lines of best-corrected visual acuity.
CONCLUSION: Patients undergoing PDT typically report reasonable visual function. In parallel with visual acuity, self-reported visual function may deteriorate slightly after PDT for AMD, but not as much as reported in untreated AMD.
History
Publication title
Graefe'S Archive for Clinical and Experimental OphthalmologyVolume
244Issue
8Pagination
972-977ISSN
0721-832XDepartment/School
Tasmanian School of MedicinePublisher
Springer-VerlagPlace of publication
175 Fifth Ave, New York, USA, Ny, 10010Repository Status
- Restricted