Posterior scleral birefringence measured by triple-input polarization-sensitive imaging as a biomarker of myopia progression.
Xinyu LiuLiqin JiangMengyuan KeIan A SigalJacqueline ChuaQuan V HoangAudrey Wi ChiaRaymond P NajjarBingyao TanJocelyn CheongValentina BellemoRachel S ChongMichaël J A GirardMarcus AngMengyang LiuGerhard GarhöferVeluchamy A BarathiSeang-Mei SawMartin VilligerLeopold SchmettererPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2023)
In myopic eyes, pathological remodelling of collagen in the posterior sclera has mostly been observed ex vivo. Here we report the development of triple-input polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography (OCT) for measuring posterior scleral birefringence. In guinea pigs and humans, the technique offers superior imaging sensitivities and accuracies than dual-input polarization-sensitive OCT. In 8-week-long studies with young guinea pigs, scleral birefringence was positively correlated with spherical equivalent refractive errors and predicted the onset of myopia. In a cross-sectional study involving adult individuals, scleral birefringence was associated with myopia status and negatively correlated with refractive errors. Triple-input polarization-sensitive OCT may help establish posterior scleral birefringence as a non-invasive biomarker for assessing the progression of myopia.