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Association Between Visual Field Damage and Gait Dysfunction in Patients With Glaucoma
November 30, 2021

Association Between Visual Field Damage and Gait Dysfunction in Patients With Glaucoma

Author(s): Jian-Yu E (1,2), Aleksandra Mihailovic (1), Catalina Garzon (1), Jennifer A Schrack (2,3), Tianjing Li (4), Sheila K West (1), Laura N Gitlin (5), David S Friedman (6), Pradeep Y Ramulu (1,2,3)

1 Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
2 Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
3 Center on Aging and Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
4 Department of Ophthalmology, School of Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora.
5 College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
6 Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Harvard Medical School, Boston.

IMPORTANCE: Gait dysfunction is common in older people with visual impairment and is a major cause of falls.

OBJECTIVE: To compare 3-year longitudinal changes in gait measures across the spectrum of baseline visual field (VF) damage in glaucoma.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A post hoc analysis was designed on September 1, 2018, following a prospective cohort study, which enrolled older adults with glaucoma or suspected glaucoma from September 2013 to March 2015 and followed up for up to 3 years. Baseline VF damage was defined by integrated VF (IVF) sensitivity and categorized as normal/mild (IVF >28 dB), moderate (IVF, 23-28 dB), and severe (IVF, <23 dB). Each participant walked on an electronic walkway back and forth twice at normal pace each study year. Linear mixed-effects models evaluated longitudinal change in gait outcomes (1) stratified within each VF severity category and (2) across the range of IVF sensitivity. Analysis took place from October 2019 to October 2020.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Three-year changes in 7 gait assessments under usual-pace walking, including base support and its coefficient of variation, stride length and its coefficient of variation, stride velocity and its coefficient of variation, and cadence.

RESULTS: Of 241 participants, the mean (SD) age was 70.8 (7.7) years, 116 (48.2%) were women, and 70 (29.0%) were African American. When comparing longitudinal gait changes over 3 years across the spectrum of IVF sensitivity, each 5-unit (dB) decrement was associated with more rapid declines in stride velocity (-0.05 z score unit/y; 95% CI, -0.09 to -0.01; P = .01) and cadence (-0.07 z score unit/y; 95% CI, -0.10 to -0.03; P < .001). When evaluating gait changes within each glaucoma severity group, shorter stride length was associated with persons with normal/mild (-0.06 z score unit/y; 95% CI, -0.10 to -0.03; P = .001), moderate (-0.08 z score unit/y; 95% CI, -0.12 to -0.04; P < .001), and severe VF damage (-0.16 z score unit/y; 95% CI, -0.24 to -0.07; P < .001), while stride velocity (-0.18 z score unit; 95% CI, -0.28 to -0.07; P = .002) and slower cadence (-0.15 z score unit; 95% CI, -0.25 to -0.04; P = .006) were associated with those with severe VF damage.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: At worse levels of baseline VF damage, patients with glaucoma in this study demonstrated an exacerbated decline in walking speeds (ie, stride velocity and cadence), indicating that mobility speeds decrease faster over time in older adults with glaucoma.

JAMA Ophthalmol. 2021 Oct 1;139(10):1053-1060. doi: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2021.2617.

PMID: 34292297 PMCID: PMC8299359 (available on 2022-07-22) DOI: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2021.2617

REVIEW BY Francesco Oddone

This is an important study which suggests that patients with glaucoma with advanced VF damage are more prone to future declines in specific gait measures and the associated health-related consequences. This paper was selected because gait dysfunction is a well-established predictor for falls, functional decline, and reduced quality of life in the older population, and it represents the first objective evidence of worse health trajectories in persons with more severe glaucoma.

Among the strenghts of this study it should be highlighted its prospective nature, being cross-sectional the majority of published reports about the relationships between visual field damage and QoL measures. Moreover, it represents an important addition to prior studies that examined the relationships between VF damage and the changes in quality of life as their primary outcome.

Limitations of this study, highlighted by the authors themselves include that the generalizability of the results might be limited by the fact that participants were enrolled from a single clinical center, that the performance-based gait measures examined in a lab by walking on a flat surface with ambient lighting may not reflect the walking in the real world, and that visual field changes that might have occurred over the 3-years of follow-up were not considered as covariates, despite the chances they have occurred were judged to be low as this was a treated cohort population. Moreover, the findings of this study might be limited by the post hoc design, which increases the risk of detecting associations that may have occurred by chance.

Clinical Paper of the Month manager: Anthony Khawaja Editorial Board: Humma Shahid, Karl Mercieca, Francisco Goni Editors in Chief: Francesco Oddone, Manuele Michelessi