Back to Search Start Over

Classification Criteria for Multifocal Choroiditis With Panuveitis

Authors :
Susan E Wittenberg
Douglas A. Jabs
Peter McCluskey
Albert T. Vitale
Antoine P. Brézin
Alan G. Palestine
Jennifer E. Thorne
Brett Trusko
Russell W. Read
Neal Oden
Ralph D. Levinson
Source :
Am J Ophthalmol
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose To determine classification criteria for multifocal choroiditis with panuveitis (MFCPU) DESIGN: : Machine learning of cases with MFCPU and 8 other posterior uveitides. Methods Cases of posterior uveitides were collected in an informatics-designed preliminary database, and a final database was constructed of cases achieving supermajority agreement on diagnosis, using formal consensus techniques. Cases were split into a training set and a validation set. Machine learning using multinomial logistic regression was used on the training set to determine a parsimonious set of criteria that minimized the misclassification rate among the posterior uveitides. The resulting criteria were evaluated on the validation set. Results One thousand sixty-eight cases of posterior uveitides, including 138 cases of MFCPU, were evaluated by machine learning. Key criteria for MFCPU included: 1) multifocal choroiditis with the predominant lesions size >125 µm in diameter; 2) lesions outside the posterior pole (with or without posterior involvement); and either 3) punched-out atrophic chorioretinal scars or 4) more than minimal mild anterior chamber and/or vitreous inflammation. Overall accuracy for posterior uveitides was 93.9% in the training set and 98.0% (95% confidence interval 94.3, 99.3) in the validation set. The misclassification rates for MFCPU were 15% in the training set and 0% in the validation set. Conclusions The criteria for MFCPU had a reasonably low misclassification rate and appeared to perform sufficiently well for use in clinical and translational research.

Details

ISSN :
00029394
Volume :
228
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Ophthalmology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a81a9f00197337d92663ecc3cb8ff641
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2021.03.043