Abstract
Aim
To measure the agreement between Schirmer's and phenol red thread tests in detecting dry eyes.
Patients and methods
A total of 103 patients attending preoperative cataract assessment clinic who agreed to be involved in the study were recruited. Each patient had one eye examined by both tests in a random order by two different investigators who were unaware of the results of the other test. Dry eye symptoms were assessed using an interviewer-administered questionnaire. The data were collected after the study period and analysed using kappa statistics to assess the agreement between the two tests.
Results
Schirmer's test was positive in 25 patients when a cutoff point of 5 mm was used and positive in 41 patients with a cutoff point of 10 mm. Phenol red thread test was positive in four patients when a cutoff point of 10 mm was used and in 32 patients with a cutoff point of 20 mm. Kappa ranged from 0.067 to 0.3 indicating very weak agreement between the two tests. In all, 27% of the patients had symptoms of dry eyes; however, the agreement between each test and the symptoms was very poor.
Conclusion
There is very weak agreement between Schirmer's test and phenol red thread tests and between each test and symptoms of dry eyes.
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Introduction
Symptoms of dry eyes are relatively common in the general population particularly the elderly.1, 2 Dry eye symptoms are common following LASIK and a reliable test to help predict the likelihood of dry eyes following refractive surgery would be valuable to the refractive surgeon. Several clinical and investigational tests have been used to assist the clinician in diagnosing and monitoring patients with dry eyes.
These include clinical history, tear film appearance on slit lamp examination, tear break up time, Fluorescein, Rose Bengal and Lissamine green staining, assessing tear osmolality, Schimer's test, and phenol red thread test.
Schimer's3 test was introduced over a hundred years ago and is still commonly used in clinical practice. Hamano et al4 introduced phenol red thread test in 1982. It has some advantages over Schirmer's test as it is more comfortable to the patient and the test is much quicker to perform.
In our study we assessed the agreement between the two tests and between each of the tests and dry eye symptoms.
Methods
Subjects were recruited from a cataract preoperative assessment clinic. Informed consents were obtained and the local ethical committee approved the study. One eye of each patient was randomly chosen to be examined by both tests. Eyes with previous ocular surgery were excluded. The order in which the two tests were undertaken was randomised by the toss of a coin. The second test was performed at least 5 min after the first one. Each test was undertaken by a different investigator who was unaware of the result of the other test.
A dry eye symptoms questionnaire was administered in a standardised fashion to each patient by one investigator.
Schirmer's test
Schirmer tear test strips (Clement Clarke) were used according to the manufacturer's instructions. No topical anaesthetic was used. The rounded wick end of the test strip was folded at the indentation and then was inserted into the lower fornix of the eye 1/3 of the distance from the lateral canthus of the lower eye lid.
After 5 min, the strip was removed and the wet part was measured up to the folded line. A reading of less than 5 mm was judged to indicate dry eyes and less than 10 mm marginally dry eyes.
Phenol red thread test
Phenol red thread tear test (ZONE-QUICK, Showa Yakuhin Kako Co., Ltd) was used. The thread is yellow in colour (acidic) and when it comes in contact with tears it changes to a light red colour. No topical anaesthetic was used. Forceps were used to insert the 3 mm folded portion of the thread into the palpebral conjunctiva of the eye 1/3 of the distance from the lateral canthus of the lower eye lid.
After 15 s, the thread was removed and the entire wet (Red) portion was measured. A reading of less than 10 mm was judged to indicate dry eyes, less than 20 mm marginally dry eyes, and more than 20 mm normal tear volume.
Dry eye symptoms questionnaire
A validated1 questionnaire relating to six symptoms of dry eyes was administered to each patient in standardised fashion (Table 1). Patients were asked to report the frequency of each symptom as rarely, sometimes, often, or all the time.
The data were collected after the study period and analysed using kappa statistics5 (Kappa=0 is agreement no better than chance and Kappa=1 is total agreement) to assess the agreement between the two tests and between the tests and symptoms score.
Results
In total, 103 patients attending a preassessment clinic for cataract surgery were recruited to the study. There were 63 female and 40 male subjects, age ranged from 23 to 92 (mean 76) years. All patients were Caucasians.
Schirmer's test was positive in 25 patients when a cutoff point of 5 mm was used and was positive in 41 patients with a cutoff point of 10 mm. Phenol red thread test was positive in four patients when a cutoff point of 10 mm was used and in 32 patients with a cutoff point of 20 mm.
There was very weak agreement between the two tests using different cutoff points as measured by Kappa statistics. Kappa ranged from 0.067 using a cutoff point of 10 mm for both tests to 0.3 using a cutoff point of 5 mm for Schirmer and 20 mm for phenol red thread test (Table 2).
A total of 28 (27%) of patients had dry eyes symptoms. The severity of symptoms ranged from 1 to 12 according to the dry eye questionnaire.
The tests had very poor agreement with symptoms of dry eyes (Table 3).
Discussion
The phenol red thread (PRT) test was developed to overcome the disadvantages of Schirmer's test including variable results, poor repeatability, and low sensitivity in detecting dry eyes. A test time of only 15 s is required in comparison to 5 min per eye needed for Schirmer test. It causes minimal discomfort and therefore is less likely to induce reflex tear production.
The PRT is theorised to measure the volume of the residual tear film in the inferior conjunctival sac of the eye.6
Tomlinson et al7 concluded that PRT is unlikely to measure tear volume or residual tear in the lower conjunctiva. They thought that it more likely measures uptake of small amount of fluid residing in the eye and it may stimulate a low degree of reflex tearing. They suggested that PRT reflects some other aspect of tears that allow differentiation between dry eye patients and normal subjects through different absorption characteristics of the thread depending on the biophysics or composition of tears in these two groups.
On the other hand, Schirmer test is thought to measure reflex tear production and possibly residual volume of tears in the eye and it has a significant inability to measure basal secretion rate even with the use of local anaesthesia.7, 8
No previous study has measured agreement between the two tests. Chiang et al9 compared the results of the two tests on 66 normal eyes and 14 dry eyes. The average wet length of the PRT test was 20.33±8.7 mm for normal eyes vs 8.1±8 mm for dry eyes and this was statistically significant. The average wet length for the Schirmer was 10.0±7.9 mm for normal eyes vs 14.6±9.8 mm for dry eyes and this was not statistically significant.
In a study by Nichols et al10 assessing relationship between symptoms of dry eyes and various tear film tests, no patients had an abnormal PRT and Schirmer test combination.
Our study showed only weak agreement between the two tests; this is possibly because each test measures different aspects of the tear film.
We have also shown that the agreement between the symptoms as measured by the validated questionnaire and either test were poor for all the cutoff values used.
This confirms the results of other studies1, 11 that show weak correlation among various tear film tests and between tear film tests and symptoms of dry eyes. This may be due to the absence of symptoms that is specific to dry eyes and also to the different mechanisms by which each test differentiate between normal and dry eyes.
Conclusion
Neither of the tests showed sensitivity in detecting patients with dry eye symptoms, and the agreement between the two tests was weak. In our study population the results of either of the tests used alone were found to be of low diagnostic value.
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Saleh, T., McDermott, B., Bates, A. et al. Phenol red thread test vs Schirmer's test: a comparative study. Eye 20, 913–915 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.eye.6702052
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.eye.6702052
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