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Br J Ophthalmol 2001;85:799-802 doi:10.1136/bjo.85.7.799
  • Scientific correspondence

Effect of digital image compression on screening for diabetic retinopathy

  1. R S B Newsoma,
  2. A Clovera,
  3. M T J Costena,
  4. J Sadlerb,
  5. J Newtonc,
  6. A J Luffa,
  7. C R Canninga
  1. aSouthampton Eye Unit, Southampton, UK, bGeodata, Southampton University, Southampton, UK, cSouthampton General Hospital, Southampton, UK
  1. Mr R S B Newsom, Vitreoretinal Unit, Moorfields Eye Hospital, City Road, London EC1V 2PD, UKrbnewsom{at}dircon.co.uk
  • Accepted 15 January 2001

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIMS Digital imaging is widely used for diabetic retinopathy screening. The storage and transmission of digital images can be facilitated by image compression. The authors aimed to assess the effect of image compression on the accuracy of grading diabetic retinopathy.

METHODS Forty nine 35 mm transparencies (17 with no retinopathy, eight with background, five with preproliferative, and 19 with proliferative retinopathy) were digitised and subjected to JPEG compression by 90%, 80%, 70%, and 0%. The 196 images were randomised and graded on a portable computer. Two masked graders assessed the images for grade of retinopathy and image quality (0–10). The sensitivity and specificity of retinopathy grading were calculated with a weighted kappa for grading agreement between levels of compression.

RESULTS The sensitivity of retinopathy grading was reduced by JPEG compression. At 90%, 80%, 70%, and 0% compression the sensitivities were 0.38, 0.50, 0.65, and 0.72, respectively; the specificity results were 1.00, 1.00, 0.83, and 0.84, respectively; and the weighted kappa scores were 0.60, 0.75, 0.77, and 0.84, respectively. The quality scores for 90%, 80%, 70%, 0% compression were 2.9 (SD 1.1, 95% CI; 2.7–3.2), 4.6 (SD 1.1, 95% CI; 3.0–5.6), 5.8 (SD1.5, 95% CI 5.0–6.6), 6.3 (SD1.4, 95% CI; 5.4–7.2) (p<0.01 for each intergroup comparison).

CONCLUSION The results demonstrate significant loss of sensitivity to the features of diabetic retinopathy with JPEG compression; this was compounded by the thin film transistor (TFT) screen. The authors found the quality of uncompressed images on TFT screens too poor to give grading sensitivities which reach current guidelines for diabetic retinopathy screening.

Footnotes

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