Diagnostics are a key factor in disease management, especially in glaucoma. Although tremendous advances have been made in ophthalmic imaging during the past few years, visual field testing remains essential to the diagnosis and management of glaucoma.

The Humphrey Field Analyzer (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc., Dublin, CA) has been widely recognized as the gold standard in automated visual field testing for more than 25 years, and it has provided clinicians with a widely accepted and broadly available language of perimetry that most doctors understand. All major glaucoma clinical trials have relied upon Humphrey perimetry, including the Advanced Glaucoma Intervention Study (AGIS), the Collaborative Initial Glaucoma Treatment Study (CIGTS), the Early Manifest Glaucoma Trial (EMGT), the Normal Tension Glaucoma Study (NTGS), and the Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study (OHTS).1-5

This article briefly reviews some of the reasons why the Humphrey perimeter has come to enjoy this status.

STANDARDIZATION
Among the many contributions to ophthalmology made by Hans Goldmann was the first universally standardized method for manual visual field testing: Goldmann perimetry. Goldmann perimeters all over the world used the same standardized stimuli and background level, allowing doctors to communicate in a common perimetric language. The Humphrey automated perimeter can be considered to be the modern day extension of Goldmann's standardization efforts in terms of availability and worldwide acceptance. The Humphrey Field Analyzer is further enhanced by widely accepted standardized testing strategies, normative data, and analytical methods, all of which provides doctors not only with an international standard for visual field testing but also a standard language for communicating results. Such uniformity has provided universally accepted criteria for glaucoma staging and diagnosis that were not widely available even 20 years ago.

TESTING ALGORITHMS
Standardization by itself is insufficient if the methods used are not sensitive, reproducible, and efficient. In the early 1980s, automated threshold testing strategies could take as long as half an hour per eye, making them neither clinically practical nor well accepted by patients. While it was simple to reduce testing time by sacrificing precision and reproducibility, it was not until the late 1990s that strategies emerged that successfully reduced testing time while maintaining diagnostic performance.6 These new strategies came to be known as the Swedish Interactive Threshold Algorithm (SITA) and now include the SITA Standard, SITA Fast, and SITA SWAP (short-wavelength automated perimetry). The SITA methods effectively cut testing time in half without giving up reproducibility or diagnostic performance.7,8

The SITA strategies have provided clinicians with a broad set of testing options that can be tailored to specific patient needs. SITA Standard 24-2 testing can run in as little as 4 minutes and is usually the most reliable option. SITA Fast 24-2 testing can be performed in as little as 2 minutes and provides a reasonable alternative in situations that demand the briefest of true threshold tests.

Some threshold testing methods save time by assuming that responses obtained at nearby test-point locations also apply to the point being tested. This shortcut blurs test points together, effectively decreasing the number of truly tested points. It is important to note that SITA is a true threshold test, which is to say that SITA methods still determine threshold at each tested location in the visual field by finding at least one brightness that can be seen and one that cannot be seen.

STANDARDIZED ANALYSIS
Once test data have been acquired, the next immediate task is to interpret the results. If the Humphrey perimeter is the gold standard of visual field testing, then STATPAC (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc.) is the universal language of perimetry. STATPAC software compares results to clinically validated, world-class, proprietary agenormative and glaucoma databases. Data analyses not only include simple plain language interpretations relative to normal or to baseline, but they also provide specific quantitative information that can help doctors make difficult treatment decisions. STATPAC analysis software is universally available, simple to use, and well documented in the peer-reviewed literature. In a world where simplicity is valued but details are often necessary, the inventors of STATPAC have made consistently practical and useful design decisions, and they continue to do so a quarter of a century after the initial introduction of the product.

HUMPHREY PERIMETRY—PAST AND FUTURE
With the recent—and in many ways stunning— improvements in ophthalmic imaging, it is easy to lose track of the continuing role of standardized automated visual field testing in glaucoma management. Continuing advances in this field, however, confirm the role of Humphrey perimetry as the gold standard in the diagnosis and management of glaucoma.