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Dive into the research topics where Claudio Cedrone is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudio Cedrone.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2005

Direct costs of glaucoma and severity of the disease: a multinational long term study of resource utilisation in Europe

Traverso Ce; Walt Jg; Kelly Sp; Hommer Ah; Bron Am; Denis P; Nordmann Jp; Renard Jp; Bayer A; Grehn F; Norbert Pfeiffer; Claudio Cedrone; Gandolfi S; Orzalesi N; Carlo Nucci; Rossetti L; Azuara-Blanco A; Bagnis A; Roger A. Hitchings; Salmon Jf; Bricola G; Buchholz Pm; Kotak Sv; Katz Lm; Siegartel Lr; Doyle Jj

Background: Resource utilisation and direct costs associated with glaucoma progression in Europe are unknown. As population progressively ages, the economic impact of the disease will increase. Methods: From a total of 1655 consecutive cases, the records of 194 patients were selected and stratified by disease severity. Record selection was based on diagnoses of primary open angle glaucoma, glaucoma suspect, ocular hypertension, or normal tension glaucoma; 5 years minimum follow up were required. Glaucoma severity was assessed using a six stage glaucoma staging system based on static threshold visual field parameters. Resource utilisation data were abstracted from the charts and unit costs were applied to estimate direct costs to the payer. Resource utilisation and estimated direct cost of treatment, per person year, were calculated. Results: A statistically significant increasing linear trend (p = 0.018) in direct cost as disease severity worsened was demonstrated. The direct cost of treatment increased by an estimated €86 for each incremental step ranging from €455 per person year for stage 0 to €969 per person year for stage 4 disease. Medication costs ranged from 42% to 56% of total direct cost for all stages of disease. Conclusions: These results demonstrate for the first time in Europe that resource utilisation and direct medical costs of glaucoma management increase with worsening disease severity. Based on these findings, managing glaucoma and effectively delaying disease progression would be expected to significantly reduce the economic burden of this disease. These data are relevant to general practitioners and healthcare administrators who have a direct influence on the distribution of resources.


Radiology | 2009

Optic Nerve and Optic Radiation Neurodegeneration in Patients with Glaucoma: In Vivo Analysis with 3-T Diffusion-Tensor MR Imaging

Francesco Garaci; Francesca Bolacchi; Angelica Cerulli; Milena Melis; A. Spanò; Claudio Cedrone; Roberto Floris; Giovanni Simonetti; Carlo Nucci

PURPOSE To evaluate, with high-field-strength diffusion-tensor (DT) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, the axonal architecture of the optic nerves and optic radiations in patients with glaucoma and determine whether DT MR imaging-derived parameters correlate with disease severity. MATERIALS AND METHODS The study was approved by the institutional review board. All participants provided written informed consent. Sixteen patients with primary open-angle glaucoma were examined. Glaucoma severity was clinically assessed with use of a six-stage system based on static threshold visual field parameters. Ten healthy individuals served as control subjects. DT MR imaging was performed with a 3-T MR unit. Mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA) maps were automatically created. Regions of interest were positioned on the MD and FA maps, and mean MD and mean FA values were calculated for each optic nerve and each optic radiation. RESULTS The optic radiations and optic nerves of patients with glaucoma, as compared with control subjects, had significantly higher MD and significantly lower FA. The mean MD values for the optic nerves and the glaucoma stages varied consistently (r = 0.8087, P < .0001). A negative correlation between mean FA for the optic nerves and glaucoma stage (r = -0.7464, P < .0001) was observed. CONCLUSION Glaucoma is a complex neurologic disease that affects optic nerves and optic radiations. The finding that DT MR imaging-derived MD and FA in the optic nerves correlate with glaucoma severity suggests that these parameters could serve as complementary indicators of disease severity.


Progress in Brain Research | 2008

Epidemiology of primary glaucoma: prevalence, incidence, and blinding effects.

Claudio Cedrone; Raffaele Mancino; Angelica Cerulli; Massimo Cesareo; Carlo Nucci

Certain general conclusions can be drawn from a series of 56 studies on glaucoma prevalence. Even in the most recently published studies the rate of undiagnosed glaucoma is particularly high. Another fairly constant finding is the discrepancy between the clinical and epidemiologic diagnoses of glaucoma. The prevalence of primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) has been increasing, and this trend is undoubtedly due at least in part to advances in diagnostic technology. The decreasing prevalence of primary angle-closure glaucoma (PACG) is due to the adoption of more stringent criteria for the diagnosis of this form of glaucoma. Prevalence increases proportionately with age for each racial group. African or African origin populations had the highest POAG prevalence at all ages but the increase in prevalence of POAG is steeper for white populations. PACG is commonest in Asian ethnic groups, with the exception of the Japanese. Low-tension glaucoma (LTG) is quite common in the Japanese population. Over 80% of those with PACG live in Asia, while POAG disproportionately affects those of African derivation. Women are more affected by glaucoma. Very few incidence studies have been completed, because the cost of examining large samples is high. There are only two recent studies conducted on persons of African descent in Barbados (West Indies) and on white inhabitants of Rotterdam (Netherlands). Risk of incident glaucoma was highest among persons classified as having suspect POAG at baseline, followed by those with ocular hypertension. No difference in incidence of POAG between men and women was found. The more recent studies which included routine visual-field testing reveal rates of blinding glaucoma <10% in many countries, including those that are developing.


Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 1997

Prevalence of glaucoma in Ponza, Italy: a comparison with other studies

Claudio Cedrone; Franco Culasso; Massimo Cesareo; Andrea Zapelloni; Paolo Cedrone; Luciano Cerulli

The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of glaucoma in Ponza, Italy. The design was a population-based prevalence survey of residents of Ponza aged 40 years or older. There were 1,296 official residents identified by a house-to-house census, of whom 1,226 were identified as eligible for the study. Of these, 1,034 individuals (449 males and 585 females), or 84.3% of the eligible population, participated in the ophthalmological examination. A two-stage method was adopted to identify cases of glaucoma. All subjects underwent a standardized initial examination. Glaucoma suspects and 50% of non-suspects were referred to a definitive examination which included visual field testing. Patients were defined as glaucoma cases if they presented abnormal visual fields and at least one of the following: high 10P, large or asymmetric cup-to-disc ratio. In addition to typical glaucomatous visual field defects such as paracentral scotoma, nasal step, arcuate scotoma and temporal and/or central islands fields, a visual field defect was identified as a decrease in sensitivity greater than 6 db in at least one location of the central 10 degrees, two locations of the central 20 degrees or three locations of the central 30 degrees. Prevalence rates of 2.51% of Primary Open Angle Glaucoma (1.72%-3.66%, CI 95%), 0.97% of Primary Closed Angle Glaucoma (0.53%-1.77%, CI 95%) and 0.29% of secondary glaucoma were found. Moreover, 2.13% of probable POAG (1.41%-3.20%, CI 95%) and 6.00% of High Intraocular Pressure (4.71%-7.61%, CI 95%) were found. The prevalence rates of POAG found in the Ponza Ophthalmological Survey are consistent with the results of other studies. Minor differences are most likely due to the different criteria adopted in the assessment of glaucomatous visual field damage.


Ophthalmology | 2003

Incidence of blindness and low vision in a sample population ☆: The Priverno Eye Study, Italy

Claudio Cedrone; Franco Culasso; Massimo Cesareo; Carlo Nucci; Stefano Palma; Raffaele Mancino; Luciano Cerulli

PURPOSE To study the incidence of blindness and low vision over a 7-year period. DESIGN Population-based cohort study. PARTICIPANTS The survivors of the original cohort of 860 persons from Priverno, Italy, aged 45 to 69 years, were reexamined. Of the 760 eligible survivors, 619 (81.4%) had a 7-year follow-up visit. METHODS Baseline and follow-up examinations included the collection of anamnestic and ophthalmologic data by the same observers using the same methods and classification criteria to minimize sources of variability. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Best-corrected visual acuity (VA) measured at 4 m by standardized logarithmic chart was expressed as the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR). World Health Organization definitions of blindness and low vision were adopted (respectively, VA > 1.3 logMar and VA > 0.6 to 1.3 logMar in the better eye or in either eye). Participants at risk for visual impairment were those without blindness or low vision in one or both eyes at baseline; participants at risk for one-eye visual impairment were those without blindness or low vision in both eyes at baseline. RESULTS A total of 33 participants were defined as incident cases of visual impairment. The overall incidence figures for blindness, low vision, one-eye blindness, and one-eye low vision were respectively 0.2% (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.0-0.9), 1.3% (95% CI, 0.7-2.6), 1.2% (95% CI, 0.6-2.4), and 2.9% (95% CI, 1.8-4.6). CONCLUSIONS This study provides population-based estimates of the incidence of visual impairment in an adult, free-living European population. With respect to the younger participants, older subjects at baseline were at higher risk for incident visual impairment, the main causes of which were cataract, myopia, and diabetic retinopathy. The incidence of visual impairment in the subgroup aged 55 to 64 years at baseline was significantly higher than that found in Beaver Dam 5-year study and similar to that found in Beaver Dam 10-year Study, when the same definitions were adopted. This difference may be partially explained by social and cultural habits of the female samples, but many other factors may play a role.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2012

3-T Diffusion tensor imaging of the optic nerve in subjects with glaucoma: correlation with GDx-VCC, HRT-III and Stratus optical coherence tomography findings

Carlo Nucci; Raffaele Mancino; Alessio Martucci; Francesca Bolacchi; Guglielmo Manenti; Claudio Cedrone; Franco Culasso; Roberto Floris; Luciano Cerulli; Francesco Garaci

Objectives To correlate diffusion-tensor imaging (DTI) of the optic nerve with morphological indices obtained by scanning laser polarimetry (GDx-VCC); confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (Heidelberg III retinal tomograph; HRT-III) and optical coherence tomography (Stratus OCT). Methods Thirty-six subjects (12 with no eye disease and 24 with perimetrically diagnosed glaucoma) were examined. One eye for each participant was studied with 3-Tesla DTI (with automatic generation of mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA) values); GDx-VCC, HRT-III and OCT. Single and multiple regression analyses of all variables studied were performed. Results MD displayed the strongest correlation with linear cup/disc ratio (LCDR) from HTR-III (r=0.662), retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness (avThickn) from OCT (r=−0.644), and nerve fibre index (NFI) from GDx (r=0.642); FA was strongly correlated with the LCDR (r=−0.499). In multiple regression analyses, MD correlated with LCDR (p=0.02) when all variables were considered; with avThickn (p<0.01) (analysis of all RNFL parameters); with NFI (p<0.01) (analysis of all GDx parameters); with avThickn (p<0.01) (analysis of OCT parameters); with LCDR (p=0.01) (analysis of HRT-III morphometric parameters) and with linear discriminant function (RB) (p=0.02) (analysis of HRT-III indices). As for FA, it correlated with avThickn (p=0.02) when we analysed the OCT parameters and with RB (p=0.01) (analysis of HRT-III indices). Conclusions DTI parameters of the axonal architecture of the optic nerve show good correlation with morphological features of the optic nerve head and RNFL documented with GDx-VCC, HRT-III and OCT.


Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics | 2006

Validity and limitations of the Nidek NT-4000 non-contact tonometer: a clinical study

Federico Regine; Gian Luca Scuderi; Massimo Cesareo; Federico Ricci; Claudio Cedrone; Carlo Nucci

Using Goldmann applanation tonometry (GAT) as a gold standard, we evaluated the accuracy of Nidek NT‐4000 pneumotonometry (NPT) in adults without corneal disease. Bland and Altman analysis of serial intra‐ocular pressures (IOPs) measured with NPT and GAT in 10 healthy subjects revealed that the repeatability coefficients for the two methods were similar. NPT, GAT and ultrasonic pachymetry were then performed in 100 patients. Bland and Altman analysis showed that NPT yielded significantly higher readings than GAT [mean biases for right and left eye measurements were 1.37 mmHg (95% limits of agreement: −3.02–5.76) and 1.17 mmHg (95% limits of agreement: −2.76–5.11) respectively] and was more affected by corneal thickness variations. For detection of IOPs ≥21 mmHg, NPT displayed very high sensitivity (0.90) and good specificity (0.95). NPT may be useful in screening and clinical settings but borderline‐high IOP readings should be confirmed with GAT.


Journal of Glaucoma | 2012

The 12-year incidence of glaucoma and glaucoma-related visual field loss in Italy: the Ponza eye study.

Claudio Cedrone; Raffaele Mancino; Federico Ricci; Angelica Cerulli; Franco Culasso; Carlo Nucci

PurposeTo assess the 12-year incidence of glaucoma and glaucoma-related visual field loss in a population-based cohort study. PatientsIn 2000, we reexamined 411 of the 581 survivors from the original Ponza eye study conducted in 1988. MethodsPrimary open-angle (POAG), primary angle-closure (PACG), and secondary [pseudoexfoliative (PEX)] glaucoma were diagnosed according to the 3-tiered system of evidence developed by the International Society of Geographical and Epidemiological Ophthalmology. Severity of glaucoma was classified according to the Bascom-Palmer system. Visual loss was defined according to World Health Organization guidelines. Relative risk ratios were calculated for several variables. ResultsThe 12-year incidence of definite POAG was 3.8% (95% confidence intervals (CI), 2.3-6.2), that is, an average annual rate of 0.32%. Corresponding rates for PACG and PEX glaucoma were 0.5% (95% CI, 0.1-1.8) and 0.8% (95% CI, 0.3-2.2), respectively. Half the incident glaucoma cases (45%) had not been diagnosed earlier. Fifty-five percent of the incident POAG eyes had Bascom-Palmer stage 1 or 2 disease and 40% of the incident PACG or PEX glaucoma eyes had stage 3 or 4 disease. Seven of 20 incident glaucoma cases presented with monocular or binocular visual loss because of advanced visual field loss. Significant risk factors for POAG included high myopia (>6.0 D), intraocular pressure ≥22 mm Hg, and glaucoma family history. ConclusionThe average annual incidence of definite POAG in Ponzas lower than that reported in persons of African ancestry and higher than that observed in certain other white populations.


Graefes Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2004

Association between lens opacities and mortality in the Priverno Eye Study

Carlo Nucci; Claudio Cedrone; Franco Culasso; Massimo Cesareo; Federico Regine; Luciano Cerulli

BackgroundLens opacities are associated with a higher risk of death, although there are some discrepancies regarding the specific types of cataract representing risk. The purpose of the present study was to further investigate the relationships between different types of lens opacity and patient survival.MethodsIn 1987, 860 residents of Priverno, Italy, aged 45–69 years underwent an ophthalmologic examination. Based on patient histories and the findings of the slit-lamp examination, each of the 860 patients was classified according to the type of opacity (pure cortical, pure nuclear, pure posterior subcapsular, mixed, and surgical aphakia). The survivors of the original cohort were re-examined in 1994. Death and survival rates were computed by the Kaplan–Meier method. Associations between mortality and significant factors were included in a stepwise Cox proportional-hazards regression model.ResultsForty-four members of the original cohort had died during the 7-year follow-up. Age-adjusted survival curves based on Kaplan–Meier estimates showed significantly lower survival in those whose baseline examinations had revealed pure nuclear opacity (log rank test: P=0.020) and aphakia (log rank test: P<0.001). When adjusted for other mortality risk factors (age, sex, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases), the hazard ratio was 4.32 for pure nuclear opacity (95% CI 1.13–16.4) and 18.3 for aphakia (95% CI 3.21–104.0).ConclusionsThe analysis of the Priverno data seems to confirm an association between lower survival and cataracts, particularly those confined to the lens nucleus and those that had already prompted surgery.


Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 2007

Age-Specific Changes in the Prevalence of Best-Corrected Visual Impairment in an Italian Population

Claudio Cedrone; Federico Ricci; Carlo Nucci; Massimo Cesareo; Giuseppe Macrì; Franco Culasso

Purpose: To investigate changes in the prevalence of visual impairment in an Italian population from 1988 to 2000. Methods: Standardized ophthalmologic examinations were administered to citizens of Ponza, Italy aged 40–87 years in 1988 and 2000. Visual Acuity (VA) was measured using a standard logarithmic chart. Visual fields (VF) were tested in all subjects with diagnosed or suspected glaucoma or hereditary degenerative retinopathy. Visual impairment was classified as blindness (VA > 1.3 LogMAR or VF < 10° around central fixation) or low vision (VA > 0.5 to 1.3 LogMAR or VF < 20° to 10°) according to WHO criteria. Results: The prevalence of binocular total visual impairments decreased significantly among 64–75 year-olds (from 6.7% to 2.6%, p = 0.045), and almost significantly among 40–51 year-olds (from 2.4%, 95% CI 1.1–5.3, to 0.0%, 95% CI 0.0–1.3). By 2000, visual impairment was no longer significantly associated with female gender, and age 64–75 years; the mean age of subjects with vision-impairing cataract, diabetic retinopathy, or age-related macular degeneration had risen significantly. Conclusions: A decline in the prevalence of visual impairment, particularly in cataract-associated visual impairment was found in the middle-aged groups. The progression of age-related eye diseases seems to have slowed in this population possibly due to improvements in the life expectancy and socio-economic conditions.

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Carlo Nucci

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Raffaele Mancino

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Luciano Cerulli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Massimo Cesareo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Franco Culasso

Sapienza University of Rome

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Federico Ricci

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Angelica Cerulli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Alessio Martucci

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Federico Regine

Sapienza University of Rome

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Francesca Bolacchi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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