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Predictors of visual function recovery in patients with non-traumatic optic neuropathy after surgical treatment

https://doi.org/10.63769/1683-3295-2026-28-1-67-75

Abstract

Background. Non-traumatic optic neuropathy is damage of the optic nerve caused by its progressive compression by a tumor or other hyperplastic process which leads to atrophy and constant visual impairment. Therefore, the optic nerve needs to be decompressed but there are no methods of predicting the results of decompression.

Aim. To identify factors affecting dynamics of visual impairment after decompression and their prognostic value.

Materials and methods. The results of surgical treatment of 64 patients with non-traumatic optic neuropathy were analyzed. All patients were examined using visometry, visual filed test, and ophthalmoscopy. Visual field changes were classified per 7 grades of severity. Determination of predictive significance of quantitative variables for favorable surgical results was performed using ROC analysis. The obtained threshold values were used to identify key predictors of favorable outcome and to develop a prognostic model employing multivariable logistic regression.

Results. The most significant predictors of improvement in vision after surgery are severity of visual field change and visual acuity prior to surgery. These characteristics gave prognostic accuracy of more than 80 % independently of other factors. The least significant characteristic for predicting visual improvement was duration of anamnesis. The final regression model included 3 predictors: duration of visual impairment less than 12 months (3 points), visual acuity >0.1 (4 points), and degree of visual filed change <5 (5 points). For maximal points, calculated probability of improvement in vision is 93.5 %. The model is statistically significant (Wald χ2 test; p <0.001) and complies with factual data (Hosmer–Lemeshow test; p = 0.504). The developed model explains 60.8 % of outcome variability, and accuracy of prognosis is 90.5 %.

Conclusion. Factors affecting dynamics of visual function in patients with compression non-traumatic optic neuropathy after microsurgical decompression of the optic nerve were identified. Identification of these predictors allowed to develop a score for evaluation of probability of vision improvement after surgery.

About the Authors

D. A. Gulyaev
V.A. Almazov National Medical Research Centre, Ministry of Health of Russia; National Medical Research Center of Oncology named after N. N. Petrov, Ministry of Health of Russia
Russian Federation

D.A. Gulyaev

2 Akkuratova St., Saint Petersburg 197341;

68 Leningradskaya St., Pesochnyy, Saint Petersburg 197758



A. V. Gruzdev
V.A. Almazov National Medical Research Centre, Ministry of Health of Russia
Russian Federation

A.V. Gruzdev

2 Akkuratova St., Saint Petersburg 197341



I. Yu. Belov
V.A. Almazov National Medical Research Centre, Ministry of Health of Russia
Russian Federation

I. Yu. Belov

2 Akkuratova St., Saint Petersburg 197341



M. A. Tikhomirova
V.A. Almazov National Medical Research Centre, Ministry of Health of Russia
Russian Federation

M. A. Tikhomirova

2 Akkuratova St., Saint Petersburg 197341



V. V. Semenyuta
First Republican Clinical Hospital, Ministry of Health of Republic of Udmurtia
Russian Federation

V.V. Semenyuta

57 Votkinskoe Shosse, Izhevsk 426039



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For citations:


Gulyaev D.A., Gruzdev A.V., Belov I.Yu., Tikhomirova M.A., Semenyuta V.V. Predictors of visual function recovery in patients with non-traumatic optic neuropathy after surgical treatment. Russian journal of neurosurgery. 2026;28(1):67-75. https://doi.org/10.63769/1683-3295-2026-28-1-67-75

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ISSN 1683-3295 (Print)
ISSN 2587-7569 (Online)
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