BMC study helps detect diabetic blindness easily- Times of India 

MUMBAI: A study done in the BMC's dispensaries with a smartphone camera has
shown that artificial intelligence (AI) can accurately diagnose diabetic
retinopathy, the second leading cause for blindness in India. Doctors feel
the device, which has a pre-mounted iPhone containing an AI programme that
works without internet, could be of help in rural areas. "The device,
operated by a semi-skilled worker, showed 100% accuracy, compared with an
ophthalmologist's diagnosis,'' said Dr S Natrajan of Aditya Jyot Foundation,
which conducted the study. There is only one ophthalmologist for every
15,000 Indians, making diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy more difficult. A
pilot study last year, published on August 9 in prestigious medical journal,
JAMA Ophthalmology, showed that 15 out of 255 patients screened in BMC's
dispensaries were rightly diagnosed by ophthalmologists as well as the
smartphone-based cameras. "After ophthalmologist grading, 187 patients were
diagnosed as having no diabetic retinopathy. Of these 187, 172 (92%) were
correctly diagnosed by the AI system, while 15 were incorrectly diagnosed as
having referable diabetic retinopathy. Ophthalmologists diagnosed 15 (8%) as
having referable diabetic retinopathy, which AI also picked up,'' said the
study. After the pilot study, the foundation tied up with Tata Trusts to
continue retinopathy screening at BMC dispensaries. At present, 1,688
patients have been screened and 117 have been diagnosed with diabetic
retinopathy. "Results of 144 patients were not clear as they also had
cataract. They have been referred for further tests,'' said Dr Natrajan. The
device and AI programme have been developed by Bengaluru company, Remidio
Innovative Solutions. "We started work on the product almost a decade back.
The idea was to make low-cost devices, easier to use than existing ones,''
said Anand Sivaraman of Remidio. The device costs Rs 3 lakh and AI costs can
be recovered by charging each patient Rs50 a scan. Dr Astha Jain of
foundation said most patients diagnosed with diabetic retinopathy in the
study did not know they had diabetes. "When we ask patients with diabetes
why they had not got their eyes tested before, they say they either did not
know or did not get an appointment,'' she added. T Y Alvin Lie from Johns
Hospitals Bloomberg School of Public Health wrote an editorial in JAMA
Ophthalmology, saying the study was "pathbreaking''. He wrote that "by
embedding the screening algorithm into smartphones, the authors have
pioneered a way to bring DR (diabetic retinopathy) screening to patients at
risk instead of relying on patients to come to point of care to be screened.
This paradigm-shifting approach to DR screening could greatly benefit rural
populations in developing and developed countries, where access to care is
limited.''

 



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