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Featured researches published by Jason Horowitz.


JAMA Ophthalmology | 2016

Expert Diagnosis of Plus Disease in Retinopathy of Prematurity From Computer-Based Image Analysis

J. Peter Campbell; Esra Ataer-Cansizoglu; Verónica Bolón-Canedo; Alican Bozkurt; Deniz Erdogmus; Jayashree Kalpathy-Cramer; Samir N. Patel; James D. Reynolds; Jason Horowitz; Kelly Hutcheson; Michael J. Shapiro; Michael X. Repka; Phillip Ferrone; Kimberly A. Drenser; Maria Ana Martinez-Castellanos; Susan Ostmo; Karyn Jonas; R.V. Paul Chan; Michael F. Chiang

IMPORTANCE Published definitions of plus disease in retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) reference arterial tortuosity and venous dilation within the posterior pole based on a standard published photograph. One possible explanation for limited interexpert reliability for a diagnosis of plus disease is that experts deviate from the published definitions. OBJECTIVE To identify vascular features used by experts for diagnosis of plus disease through quantitative image analysis. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A computer-based image analysis system (Imaging and Informatics in ROP [i-ROP]) was developed using a set of 77 digital fundus images, and the system was designed to classify images compared with a reference standard diagnosis (RSD). System performance was analyzed as a function of the field of view (circular crops with a radius of 1-6 disc diameters) and vessel subtype (arteries only, veins only, or all vessels). Routine ROP screening was conducted from June 29, 2011, to October 14, 2014, in neonatal intensive care units at 8 academic institutions, with a subset of 73 images independently classified by 11 ROP experts for validation. The RSD was compared with the majority diagnosis of experts. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome measure was the percentage of accuracy of the i-ROP system classification of plus disease, with the RSD as a function of the field of view and vessel type. Secondary outcome measures included the accuracy of the 11 experts compared with the RSD. RESULTS Accuracy of plus disease diagnosis by the i-ROP computer-based system was highest (95%; 95% CI, 94%-95%) when it incorporated vascular tortuosity from both arteries and veins and with the widest field of view (6-disc diameter radius). Accuracy was 90% or less when using only arterial tortuosity and 85% or less using a 2- to 3-disc diameter view similar to the standard published photograph. Diagnostic accuracy of the i-ROP system (95%) was comparable to that of 11 expert physicians (mean 87%, range 79%-99%). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Experts in ROP appear to consider findings from beyond the posterior retina when diagnosing plus disease and consider tortuosity of both arteries and veins, in contrast with published definitions. It is feasible for a computer-based image analysis system to perform comparably with ROP experts, using manually segmented images.


Graefes Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology | 2013

Disruption of the human cone photoreceptor mosaic from a defect in NR2E3 transcription factor function in young adults

Sung Pyo Park; In Hwan Hong; Stephen H. Tsang; Winston Lee; Jason Horowitz; Suzanne Yzer; Rando Allikmets; Stanley Chang

BackgroundEnhanced S-cone syndrome is an orphan disease caused by mutations in the NR2E3 gene which result in an increased number of S-cones overpopulating the retina. Although the characteristic onset of enhanced S-cone syndrome can be well-documented by current ophthalmic imaging modalities, techniques such as spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (SLO) fail to provide sufficient details regarding the microstructure of photoreceptors in retinal diseases. Adaptive optics (AO) provides a unique opportunity to analyze the effects of genetic mutations on photoreceptors by compensating aberrations of human eyes.MethodsThree eyes of three young adults with enhanced S-cone syndrome were studied by clinical examination, genetic screening, fundus autofluorescence (FAF) imaging, SD-OCT, and electroretinography (ERG). Cone mosaic imaging was accomplished by an AO-SLO equipped with a dual crystal on silicon spatial light modulator. Qualitative image analyses and genetic findings were investigated in each patient.ResultsThe diagnosis of patients was confirmed by ERG finding. Genetic screening confirmed the presence of two disease-causing mutations in the NR2E3 gene in each study patient, as well as identified a novel mutation (202 A > G, S68G). Fundus photograph, FAF, and SD-OCT found rosette-like lesion within the mid-periphery along the vascular arcades of the retina. In all AO-SLO images of patients, sparse distribution and asymmetric size of cone mosaic pattern were found within central retina. There were regions of dark space between groups of photoreceptors, distinguishable from shadowing and artifacts.ConclusionsAO-SLO provided an in-depth window into the retina of live enhanced S-cone syndrome patients beyond the ability of other current imaging modalities. Dark lesions within the central retina in each patient contain structurally dysfunctional cones which account for retinal mosaic disorganization, and may predispose affected areas to other abnormalities such as rosette lesions. AO-SLO can be an efficient diagnostic tool in clinics for examining cellular-level pathologies in various retinal dystrophies.


Ophthalmology | 2016

Plus Disease in Retinopathy of Prematurity: Improving Diagnosis by Ranking Disease Severity and Using Quantitative Image Analysis.

Jayashree Kalpathy-Cramer; J. Peter Campbell; Deniz Erdogmus; Peng Tian; Dharanish Kedarisetti; Chace Moleta; James D. Reynolds; Kelly Hutcheson; Michael J. Shapiro; Michael X. Repka; Philip J. Ferrone; Kimberly A. Drenser; Jason Horowitz; Kemal Sonmez; Ryan Swan; Susan Ostmo; Karyn Jonas; R.V. Paul Chan; Michael F. Chiang; Osode Coki; Cheryl-Ann Eccles; Leora Sarna; Audina M. Berrocal; Catherin Negron; Kimberly Denser; Kristi Cumming; Tammy Osentoski; Tammy Check; Mary Zajechowski; Thomas C. Lee

PURPOSE To determine expert agreement on relative retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) disease severity and whether computer-based image analysis can model relative disease severity, and to propose consideration of a more continuous severity score for ROP. DESIGN We developed 2 databases of clinical images of varying disease severity (100 images and 34 images) as part of the Imaging and Informatics in ROP (i-ROP) cohort study and recruited expert physician, nonexpert physician, and nonphysician graders to classify and perform pairwise comparisons on both databases. PARTICIPANTS Six participating expert ROP clinician-scientists, each with a minimum of 10 years of clinical ROP experience and 5 ROP publications, and 5 image graders (3 physicians and 2 nonphysician graders) who analyzed images that were obtained during routine ROP screening in neonatal intensive care units. METHODS Images in both databases were ranked by average disease classification (classification ranking), by pairwise comparison using the Elo rating method (comparison ranking), and by correlation with the i-ROP computer-based image analysis system. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Interexpert agreement (weighted κ statistic) compared with the correlation coefficient (CC) between experts on pairwise comparisons and correlation between expert rankings and computer-based image analysis modeling. RESULTS There was variable interexpert agreement on diagnostic classification of disease (plus, preplus, or normal) among the 6 experts (mean weighted κ, 0.27; range, 0.06-0.63), but good correlation between experts on comparison ranking of disease severity (mean CC, 0.84; range, 0.74-0.93) on the set of 34 images. Comparison ranking provided a severity ranking that was in good agreement with ranking obtained by classification ranking (CC, 0.92). Comparison ranking on the larger dataset by both expert and nonexpert graders demonstrated good correlation (mean CC, 0.97; range, 0.95-0.98). The i-ROP system was able to model this continuous severity with good correlation (CC, 0.86). CONCLUSIONS Experts diagnose plus disease on a continuum, with poor absolute agreement on classification but good relative agreement on disease severity. These results suggest that the use of pairwise rankings and a continuous severity score, such as that provided by the i-ROP system, may improve agreement on disease severity in the future.


Retinal Cases & Brief Reports | 2016

PURTSCHER RETINOPATHY AS A MANIFESTATION OF HEMOPHAGOCYTIC LYMPHOHISTIOCYTOSIS.

Dov B. Sebrow; Elona Dhrami-Gavazi; Jason Horowitz; Lawrence A. Yannuzzi

Purpose: The authors describe a woman diagnosed with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and found to have retinal examination findings consistent with Purtscher retinopathy. Methods: A 52-year-old woman underwent multimodal imaging, including color fundus photography and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography, to confirm the diagnosis. Results: The ophthalmic examination and imaging confirmed the findings of Purtscher retinopathy with significant inner retinal thickening on spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Throughout a hospital course complicated by multi-organ failure, she continued to have profoundly limited visual acuity, likely resulting from inner retinal ischemia affecting the posterior pole of both eyes. Conclusion: The authors describe a patient with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, a disease characterized by disruption of normal natural killer cell activity with subsequent uncontrolled cytokine release, who presented with Purtscher retinopathy confirmed with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography.


Retinal Cases & Brief Reports | 2016

MACULAR PERIVENOUS RETINAL WHITENING AND PRESUMED RETINO-CILIARY SPARING IN A RECURRENT CENTRAL RETINAL VEIN OCCLUSION ASSOCIATED WITH THE ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID SYNDROME AND CRYOGLOBULINEMIA.

Dov B. Sebrow; Jesse J. Jung; Jason Horowitz; Jeffrey G. Odel; K. Bailey Freund

Purpose: Macular perivenous retinal whitening results from hypoperfusion-induced ischemia of the middle retina that can occur in central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO). We describe an unusual case of recurrent CRVO with macular perivenous retinal whitening and retino–ciliary venous sparing in the setting of 2 prothrombotic diseases, antiphospholipid syndrome and Type II cryoglobulinemia. Methods: A 50-year-old man presented with intermittent loss of vision in his right eye related to a recurrent CRVO. Color photography, optical coherence tomography, and fluorescein angiography were performed and compared with those obtained during a previous CRVO that occurred 6 years earlier in the same eye. Results: On presentation, visual acuity was hand motion in the right eye, 20/30 in the left eye. Funduscopic examination of the right eye showed vascular tortuosity, scattered retinal hemorrhages, and retinal whitening in the macula. Optical coherence tomography showed hyperreflectivity of the middle layers of the retina that correlated with the areas of retinal whitening. A discrete area of retinal sparing was noted in the superonasal macula that, on fluorescein angiography, corresponded to the distribution of a single retino–ciliary vein. A review of retinal imaging obtained during the patients previous CRVO showed similar but more subtle findings of retino–ciliary sparing. Laboratory testing revealed antiphospholipid syndrome and Type II cryoglobulinemia. As the patients CRVO progressed and subsequently stabilized after treatment in the following months, this area of venous sparing remained the only functional, nonischemic retinal tissue in his macula. Presumably, this vein possessed privileged and uncompromised blood flow by circumventing the occluded venous circulation. Conclusion: Macular perivenous retinal whitening should be considered in the differential diagnosis of retinal whitening and occurs in CRVO secondary to hypoperfusion-induced middle retinal ischemia. To our knowledge, this case represents the first description of retino–ciliary venous sparing of the retina in CRVO.


Ophthalmic Surgery and Lasers | 2015

Long-term follow-up of astrocytic hamartoma of the optic disc associated with gyrate atrophy.

Dov B. Sebrow; Jesse J. Jung; Lora R Dagi Glass; Jason Horowitz; Stanley Chang

This is a case report of a 15-year-old boy with multiple small peripapillary white growths in the right eye in the setting of gyrate atrophy. Over 3 years of follow-up, these lesions became more clearly delineated as astrocytic hamartomas of the retina and optic disc. In the setting of gyrate atrophy, astrocytic hamartomas are extremely rare. This report represents the second published case and includes characterization of these tumors using spectral-domain optical coherence tomography.


Retina-the Journal of Retinal and Vitreous Diseases | 2017

PROPHYLACTIC PREOPERATIVE LASER RETINOPEXY DOES NOT REDUCE THE OCCURRENCE OF RHEGMATOGENOUS RETINAL COMPLICATIONS IN MACULAR SURGERY.

Aakriti Garg; Jonathan S. Chang; Gian Marco Tosi; Pierluigi Esposti; Royce W. S. Chen; Jason Horowitz; Quan V Hoang; William M. Schiff; Gaetano R. Barile; Stanley Chang

Purpose: Knowledge on the utility of prophylactic 360° laser retinopexy before pars plana vitrectomy in the absence of peripheral retinal pathology is limited. This study compares the occurrence of rhegmatogenous events in the setting of small-gauge pars plana vitrectomy with and without prophylactic preoperative laser. Methods: Our multicenter, retrospective case–control analysis reviewed patients who underwent epiretinal membrane removal or macular hole repair through 23- or 25-gauge pars plana vitrectomy: 205 controls who did not receive prophylactic laser and 176 cases who received preoperative prophylactic laser retinopexy anterior to the equator. Main outcome measures were the rate and characteristics of postoperative retinal tears and detachments. Patients with previous pars plana vitrectomy or significant retinal disease were excluded. Results: Of those patients with prophylactic laser and those without, there was no significant difference in the number of retinal breaks (1.7% vs. 0.49%, respectively; P = 0.339) or retinal detachments (0% vs. 0.49%, respectively; P = 1.00). Of the lasered group, there was one sclerotomy-related retinal break and two non–sclerotomy-related retinal breaks. Of the nonlasered group, there was one non–sclerotomy-related retinal break and one sclerotomy-related retinal detachment. Conclusion: Preoperative prophylactic peripheral laser retinopexy does not seem to offer an added benefit in the prevention of intraoperative and postoperative rhegmatogenous events.


JAMA Ophthalmology | 2016

A Postmortem Ocular Finding of Tache Noire in a Living Patient

Michael K. Lin; Dov B. Sebrow; Michele Slone; Jason Horowitz

A Postmortem Ocular Finding of Tache Noire in a Living Patient Patients in the intensive care unit develop exposure keratopathy in the setting of sedation and severe illness. This chronic drying of the ocular surface can cause corneal ulceration and even perforation.1 In a patient who was being treated in the intensive care unit, desiccation in the exposed part of the eye produced a pattern of scleral discoloration known to forensic pathologists as tache noire de la sclerotique, which is an early postmortem darkening of the sclera where the eye is not covered by the lids.2 To our knowledge, this is the first report of a postmortem eye finding in a living patient.


american medical informatics association annual symposium | 2014

Development and Evaluation of Reference Standards for Image-based Telemedicine Diagnosis and Clinical Research Studies in Ophthalmology

Michael C. Ryan; Susan Ostmo; Karyn Jonas; Audina M. Berrocal; Kimberly A. Drenser; Jason Horowitz; Thomas C. Lee; Charles F. Simmons; Maria Ana Martinez-Castellanos; R.V. Paul Chan; Michael F. Chiang


Ophthalmology | 2016

Plus Disease in Retinopathy of Prematurity: A Continuous Spectrum of Vascular Abnormality as a Basis of Diagnostic Variability.

J. Peter Campbell; Jayashree Kalpathy-Cramer; Deniz Erdogmus; Peng Tian; Dharanish Kedarisetti; Chace Moleta; James D. Reynolds; Kelly Hutcheson; Michael J. Shapiro; Michael X. Repka; Philip J. Ferrone; Kimberly A. Drenser; Jason Horowitz; Kemal Sonmez; Ryan Swan; Susan Ostmo; Karyn Jonas; R.V. Paul Chan; Michael F. Chiang; Osode Coki; Cheryl Ann Eccles; Leora Sarna; Audina M. Berrocal; Catherin Negron; Kimberly Denser; Kristi Cumming; Tammy Osentoski; Tammy Check; Mary Zajechowski; Thomas C. Lee

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