James S Wolffsohn, José Benítez-Del-Castillo, Denise Loya-Garcia, Takenori Inomata, Geetha Iyar, Lingyi Liang, Heiko Pult, Alfonso L Sabater, Christopher E Starr, Jelle Vehof, Michael Tm Wang, Wei Chen, Jennifer P Craig, Murat Dogru, Victor L Perez Quinones, Fiona Stapleton, David A Sullivan, Lyndon Jones
{"title":"TFOS DEWS III Diagnostic Methodology.","authors":"James S Wolffsohn, José Benítez-Del-Castillo, Denise Loya-Garcia, Takenori Inomata, Geetha Iyar, Lingyi Liang, Heiko Pult, Alfonso L Sabater, Christopher E Starr, Jelle Vehof, Michael Tm Wang, Wei Chen, Jennifer P Craig, Murat Dogru, Victor L Perez Quinones, Fiona Stapleton, David A Sullivan, Lyndon Jones","doi":"10.1016/j.ajo.2025.05.033","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>A standard approach to the diagnosis of dry eye disease across eye care practitioners is critical to reassuring the patient, providing consistency between practitioners and informing governments as to the true prevalence and resulting healthcare needs. The Tear Film & Ocular Surface Society (TFOS) Dry Eye Workshop (DEWS) III has reviewed the evidence-base since their previous reports published in 2017 and revised the definition to \"Dry eye is a multifactorial, symptomatic disease characterized by a loss of homeostasis of the tear film and/or ocular surface, in which tear film instability and hyperosmolarity, ocular surface inflammation and damage, and neurosensory abnormalities are etiological factors.\" Key features from the definition include that dry eye disease is multifactorial, is a disease and not a syndrome and is always symptomatic. Differential diagnosis and ocular examination guidance is given along with the risk factors that should be discussed with the patient. The recommended screening questionnaire is the OSDI-6 with a cut-off score ≥4. A positive result together with a non-invasive breakup time <10s or alternatively tear film hyperosmolarity (≥308mOsm/L in higher eye or an interocular difference >8mOsm/L) gives a diagnosis of dry eye. In addition, the ocular surface should be stained and positive symptomology together with >5 corneal fluorescein and/or >9 conjunctival lissamine green punctate spots and/or lid margin lissamine green staining of ≥2mm length & ≥25 %width also gives a diagnosis of dry eye. Subclassification was separated into tear film (lipid, aqueous and mucin/glycocalyx) and ocular surface and adnexa (anatomical misalignment, blink/lid closure, lid margin, neural dysfunction, ocular surface cell damage/disruption and primary inflammation/oxidative stress) components, with appropriate clinical tests and cut-offs provided to identify these etiological drivers in an individual, to inform appropriate management and therapy.</p>","PeriodicalId":7568,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Ophthalmology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Ophthalmology","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajo.2025.05.033","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"OPHTHALMOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A standard approach to the diagnosis of dry eye disease across eye care practitioners is critical to reassuring the patient, providing consistency between practitioners and informing governments as to the true prevalence and resulting healthcare needs. The Tear Film & Ocular Surface Society (TFOS) Dry Eye Workshop (DEWS) III has reviewed the evidence-base since their previous reports published in 2017 and revised the definition to "Dry eye is a multifactorial, symptomatic disease characterized by a loss of homeostasis of the tear film and/or ocular surface, in which tear film instability and hyperosmolarity, ocular surface inflammation and damage, and neurosensory abnormalities are etiological factors." Key features from the definition include that dry eye disease is multifactorial, is a disease and not a syndrome and is always symptomatic. Differential diagnosis and ocular examination guidance is given along with the risk factors that should be discussed with the patient. The recommended screening questionnaire is the OSDI-6 with a cut-off score ≥4. A positive result together with a non-invasive breakup time <10s or alternatively tear film hyperosmolarity (≥308mOsm/L in higher eye or an interocular difference >8mOsm/L) gives a diagnosis of dry eye. In addition, the ocular surface should be stained and positive symptomology together with >5 corneal fluorescein and/or >9 conjunctival lissamine green punctate spots and/or lid margin lissamine green staining of ≥2mm length & ≥25 %width also gives a diagnosis of dry eye. Subclassification was separated into tear film (lipid, aqueous and mucin/glycocalyx) and ocular surface and adnexa (anatomical misalignment, blink/lid closure, lid margin, neural dysfunction, ocular surface cell damage/disruption and primary inflammation/oxidative stress) components, with appropriate clinical tests and cut-offs provided to identify these etiological drivers in an individual, to inform appropriate management and therapy.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Ophthalmology is a peer-reviewed, scientific publication that welcomes the submission of original, previously unpublished manuscripts directed to ophthalmologists and visual science specialists describing clinical investigations, clinical observations, and clinically relevant laboratory investigations. Published monthly since 1884, the full text of the American Journal of Ophthalmology and supplementary material are also presented online at www.AJO.com and on ScienceDirect.
The American Journal of Ophthalmology publishes Full-Length Articles, Perspectives, Editorials, Correspondences, Books Reports and Announcements. Brief Reports and Case Reports are no longer published. We recommend submitting Brief Reports and Case Reports to our companion publication, the American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports.
Manuscripts are accepted with the understanding that they have not been and will not be published elsewhere substantially in any format, and that there are no ethical problems with the content or data collection. Authors may be requested to produce the data upon which the manuscript is based and to answer expeditiously any questions about the manuscript or its authors.