Primary Care Doctors Identify Patients with Eye Disease Using Artificial Intelligence

ATLANTA, Nov. 5, 2019 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Two primary care doctors in Georgia are closing the eye care gap for people with diabetes using artificial intelligence.

Lee Herman, MD, and Michael Conlin, MD are internists at Johns Creek Primary Care, a primary care clinic in northern Atlanta. They are among the first doctors in the nation to test patients for diabetic retinopathy, a leading cause of blindness, using IDx-DR, an FDA-cleared autonomous AI system.

"We are using IDx-DR to ensure none of our patients are delaying their diabetic retinopathy check," said Dr. Herman. "This is helping to catch patients who have disease that would have gone undetected, acting as a sight-saving bridge between eye care appointments."

Herman and Conlin have tested more than 150 patients using IDx-DR to date. Twenty patients who did not have a previous diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy were identified with disease by the AI system. Patients with positive results are referred on to an ophthalmologist for further monitoring and treatment to prevent vision loss.

Bill Lamm, a retired 67-year-old with diabetes from Duluth, Georgia, is a patient of Dr. Herman's who recently received a positive result from IDx-DR.

"I got the results back right after the test letting me know there was something there," said Lamm. "My ophthalmologist called me in right away."

Lamm's ophthalmologist, Larry Heit, MD, confirmed the presence of disease but that it was not at a level that required treatment, so he switched Lamm's follow-up eye exam from annual to every 6 months for more regular monitoring.

"There are many borderline cases like Bill that simply require more monitoring," said Dr. Heit. "Every patient is different, and disease can progress more quickly in some than others."

Lamm has high praise for the clinic's adoption of IDx-DR. "Dr. Herman is very proactive about introducing new diagnostic procedures and technologies to enhance oversight of my general healthcare," said Lamm. "It's unusual for a primary care physician to have the ability to check for retinopathy. If you have patients who never go to an eye care specialist because they don't have glasses or other vision issues, the ability to make a first-time diagnosis in primary care is important."

Dr. Heit agrees. He is thankful that Herman and other physicians are using IDx-DR to ensure patients are tested for diabetic retinopathy.

"As an ophthalmologist, I want to make sure that patients who currently have disease and are at greatest risk for vision loss are in my care," said Heit. "Putting an AI system like IDx-DR in primary care can help ensure that patients are aware they have disease and follow through on their eye care appointments sooner. This is especially critical for patients who don't get an eye exam annually or even years at a time."
Over 30 million Americans have diabetes and are at high risk of visual loss and blindness from diabetic retinopathy. Experts recommend annual eye exams, but a Diabetes Care study shows that as few as 15% of Medicare patients follow through on eye care referrals.

Dr. Herman stresses that, while IDx-DR is a valuable test, patients are still encouraged to see an eye care specialist.

"We make it clear to our patients that this not a replacement to a comprehensive eye exam, but the AI is very sensitive and can detect signs of disease that may not be visible to the human eye," said Dr. Herman.

Johns Creek Primary Care participates in the Emory Healthcare Network's Accountable Care Organization (ACO). The diabetic retinopathy exam is an important diabetes care quality measure tracked by many health systems and ACOs because early detection of diabetic retinopathy has been shown to be a cost-effective way to improve patient outcomes.

"From a diabetes management perspective, IDx-DR allows me to have a lot more control over patients getting all the recommended tests because I can now conduct the diabetic retinopathy exam in house," said Dr. Herman. "Only about 16% of my patients used to have their diabetic retinopathy exam documented in their charts; I am now trending close to 100% documentation."

Johns Creek Primary Care was recently recognized as the Best Internal Medicine clinic in North Atlanta, its second year in a row receiving the honor.

About IDx-DR
IDx-DR is an FDA-cleared AI-based diagnostic system designed for use at the front lines of care to detect diabetic retinopathy, a complication of diabetes and a leading cause of blindness. IDx-DR is cleared by the FDA to make an assessment without the need for a clinician to also interpret the image or results, making it usable by health care providers who may not normally be involved in eye care.

The exam typically takes 5-10 minutes. Nurses use an automated fundus camera to take pictures of the patient's retinas - the back part of the eye. The pictures are then scanned by the autonomous AI's diagnostic software, which searches for signs of diabetic retinopathy. An immediate diagnostic report is produced at the point of care, allowing the physician to discuss the results with the patient while they are still in the office.

About IDx
IDx is a leading AI diagnostics company on a mission to transform the quality, accessibility, and affordability of healthcare. Founded in 2010 by a team of world-renowned clinician scientists, the company is focused on developing clinically-aligned autonomous algorithms that detect disease in medical images. By enabling diagnostic assessment in primary care settings, IDx aims to increase patient access to high-quality, affordable disease detection.

The company's first product, IDx-DR, is an FDA-cleared AI-based diagnostic system that detects diabetic retinopathy and macular edema. IDx is developing additional AI-based diagnostic systems for the detection of macular degeneration, glaucoma, stroke risk and ear infection.

SOURCE IDx