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Community Optometrist–Led Monitoring of Quiescent Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration: The FENETRE Randomized Clinical Trial

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Ashleigh KernohanORCiD, Professor Luke Vale

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND).


Abstract

© 2026 Sharma A et al. Importance: Hospital-based ophthalmology faces increasing demand for long-term monitoring of neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD). Safe redistribution of routine monitoring to community clinicians is relevant to integrated community (primary)–secondary care models. Objective: To examine whether community optometrist–led monitoring of nAMD is noninferior to hospital-based monitoring for detecting disease activity requiring treatment. Design, Setting, and Participants: This multicenter, noninferiority randomized clinical trial was conducted from October 8, 2019, to January 31, 2024, at secondary centers (17 hospitals) and primary centers (60 community optometry practices) with 12-month follow-up. Statisticians were masked to patient grouping. Adults 55 years or older with quiescent AMD in at least 1 eye (and quiescent or nonneovascular disease in the other) were recruited at participating hospitals. Data analysis was performed from October 2024 to March 2025. Interventions Participants were randomized 1:1 to monitoring sessions once every 2 months in hospitals (control) or community practices (intervention). Trained and accredited optometrists performed optical coherence tomography imaging, clinical examination, patient management, and online reporting at each visit. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome (participant level) was a binary indicator of whether a false-negative clinical management decision occurred at any visit within 12 months (missed quiescent nAMD reactivation or new fellow-eye nAMD, adjudicated by a central reading-center reference standard). The noninferiority margin was a 10–percentage point absolute risk difference. Secondary outcomes were false-positive clinical management decisions, attendance adherence, visual acuity change, harms, loss to follow-up, suspicious classifications, and confirmation visit outcomes. Results: Of 704 randomized participants, 635 (90.2%) completed at least 1 follow-up visit, including 287 at community practices (mean [SD] age, 80.6 [8.1] years; 236 [67.4%] female) and 348 at hospitals (mean [SD] age, 80.1 [8.5] years; 203 [57.3%] female). False-negative clinical management decisions occurred in 11 of 287 community participants (3.8%) vs 27 of 348 hospital participants (7.8%) (risk difference, −3.9 percentage points; 95% CI, −7.4 to −0.3 percentage points; P =.04; adjusted odds ratio, 0.51; 95% CI, 0.24-1.07; P =.08), meeting noninferiority. False-positive clinical management decisions occurred in 24 of 287 community participants (8.4%) vs 12 of 348 hospital participants (3.5%) (risk difference, 4.9 percentage points; 95% CI, 0.9-9.0 percentage points). Findings were consistent across per-protocol, cluster-adjusted, and relative risk sensitivity analyses. No adverse event–related withdrawals occurred. Conclusions and Relevance: In this randomized clinical trial, community optometrist–led monitoring of quiescent nAMD was noninferior to hospital monitoring for detecting disease activity requiring treatment. These results provide evidence for its use in integrated clinical care models.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Sharma A, Jaber A, Pal B, Lawrenson JG, Harper RA, Tufail A, Learoyd AE, Robinson E, Douiri A, Burman R, Kernohan A, Vougioukalou S, Read S, Csontos J, Jones A, Mahmood S, McKibbin M, Peacock JL, Gale R, Patel PJ, Keane PA, Hamilton R, Vale L, Bunce C, Balaskas K

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: JAMA Network Open

Year: 2026

Volume: 9

Issue: 6

Online publication date: 15/06/2026

Acceptance date: 04/04/2026

Date deposited: 01/07/2026

ISSN (electronic): 2574-3805

Publisher: American Medical Association

URL: https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.17984

DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.17984

Data Access Statement: For the Data Sharing Statement see Supplement 3 of the article.


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
NIHR Health Technology Assessment Programme grant 17/85/05

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