Robertson G, Fleming A, Williams MC, Trucco E, Quinn N, Hogg RE, McKay GJ, Pellegrini E, Newby DE, van Beek EJ, Peto T, Dhillon B, van Hemert J, MacGillivray T. Screening for hypertension using retinal vascular calibre in ultra-widefield fundus imaging. Poster presented at the American Heart Association's Joint Hypertension 2018 Scientific Sessions; September 6, 2018. Chicago, IL. [abstract] Hypertension. 2018 Dec 6; 72:AP400. doi: 10.1161/hyp.72.suppl_1.P400


Fundus images from the left eyes of 440 subjects aged 50-59 years enrolled in the Northern Ireland Cohort of Longitudinal Ageing were analyzed. Subjects were categorized as normotensive or hypertensive, according to thresholds on systolic/diastolic blood pressure measurement (140/90 mm Hg) averaged over two sitting measurements in a clinical setting. A fully automatic system to analyze each image used conventional and deep neural network machine learning techniques to locate retinal landmarks and detect, classify and measure retinal vessels. From this data, a measure of the arteriolar-venular ratio (AVR) in the peripheral retina was calculated. Semi-automatic analysis was also performed. Results are presented in Table 1. Subjects had mean age of 54.6 ± 2.9 years; 56.1% (247 of 440) females, with 34.3% (151 of 440) subjects categorized as hypertensive. Narrower arterioles and smaller AVR were observed in subjects with hypertension. This was also observed in fully-automated analysis, however 4% (17 of 440) subjects failed to be processed by the system. In fully-automated analysis the area under a receiver operator characteristic curve of AVR for hypertensive status was 0.69 (95% CI, 0.63 to 0.74).

Share on: