Analysis of choroidal markers of activity in pachychoroid disease spectrum.

Raphaela M Fuganti, Fernando Campiolo, Ahmad Mansour, Luiz H Lima, Mauricio Maia, Antonio Marcelo Casella
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Abstract

Purpose: To detect choroidal markers of disease activity in eyes with chronic active unilateral pachychoroid disease spectrum (PDS) compared to the non-active contralateral eyes, based on multimodal imaging and particularly indocyanine green angiography (ICGA).

Methods: An observational retrospective case-control study. The study evaluated individuals diagnosed with chronic active unilateral PDS (group 1) by comparing the eyes with the non-active fellow eyes (group 2). Imaging was performed using fundus photographs, ICGA, and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT). Choroidal thickness, choroidal vascular density, choroidal vasodilation, choroidal vascular leakage, and choroidal meridian breakdown were evaluated.

Results: Of the 90 patients with chronic PDS with ICGA at our database, 27 Caucasians (mean age: 55.9 years) were identified with active unilateral PDS. Group 1 showed a higher prevalence of the following parameters compared to Group 2: choroidal meridian breakdown (81.5% vs. 25.9%; p < 0.001), choroidal vasodilation (88.9% vs. 48.1%; p < 0.001), greater subfoveal choroidal thickness (420 ± 79.8 μm vs. 346 ± 78.5 μm; p = 0.002), ICGA choroidal vascular leakage (96.3% vs. 29.6%; p < 0.001), and choroidal hyperpermeability (100% vs. 29.6%; p < 0.001), with a nonsignificant increase in choroidal vascular density (55.4%±13.4 vs. 49.3%±13.5 in the contralateral eye; p = 0.167).

Conclusion: Choroidal meridian breakdown, thicker choroid, choroidal vasodilation, and ICGA choroidal vascular leakage are potential posterior choroidal markers of disease activity in PDS.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
7.40%
发文量
398
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Graefe''s Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology is a distinguished international journal that presents original clinical reports and clini-cally relevant experimental studies. Founded in 1854 by Albrecht von Graefe to serve as a source of useful clinical information and a stimulus for discussion, the journal has published articles by leading ophthalmologists and vision research scientists for more than a century. With peer review by an international Editorial Board and prompt English-language publication, Graefe''s Archive provides rapid dissemination of clinical and clinically related experimental information.
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