以多模态活体图为工具,确定成年期斯达加特病进展的视网膜结构生物标志物特征

H. R. Pedersen, S. Gilson, L. Hagen, Josephine Prener Holtan, R. Bragadóttir, R. Baraas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过体内多模态视网膜成像图确定成年型斯塔加特病进展的视网膜结构生物标志物。通过共焦和非共焦自适应光学扫描光眼底镜 (AOSLO)、光学相干断层扫描 (OCT)、眼底红外 (FIR)、短波长自动荧光 (FAF) 和彩色眼底照相 (CFP) 对 7 名经遗传学确诊和临床诊断为成人型斯达加特病的成年患者(29-69 岁;3 名男性)和年龄匹配的健康对照组进行了成像。在将 AOSLO 图像蒙太奇与正面红外、FAF 和 OCT 扫描图像对齐之前,会根据横向放大率的差异对每种成像模式的图像进行缩放,以探索不同成像模式下视网膜结构的变化。对黄斑区域的感光细胞、视网膜色素上皮(RPE)细胞、斑点和其他视网膜改变进行识别、划分,并在不同成像模式之间进行关联。在临床成像显示外观正常、OCT 显示视网膜外层结构完整的区域,从分割的 OCT 图像中提取视网膜层厚。细胞密度的偏心依赖性与视网膜厚度和视网膜外层厚度进行了比较,对不同患者进行了评估,并与健康对照组的数据进行了比较。患者的眼窝结构变化很大,视力也同样变化很大(-0.02 至 0.98 logMAR)。锥体和杆状光感受器以及某些区域的 RPE 样结构可在非聚焦分裂检测 AOSLO 图像上量化。在靠近眼窝中心的暗视野 AOSLO 图像上也能看到 RPE 细胞。在临床上CFP、FIR、FAF和OCT外观正常的区域以及三名患者的完整锥体内节镶嵌中,共焦AOSLO上可以看到非导波锥体的低反射间隙(暗锥体)。暗锥体被确定为成年型Stargardt病视网膜疾病进展的第一个信号,因为在外观和视网膜外层厚度正常的视网膜位置可以观察到这些暗锥体。这与之前的一份报告相吻合,该报告认为暗色锥体是儿童期斯达加特病发展的第一个征兆。这也支持了一种假设,即在斯塔加特病中,光感受器变性发生在 RPE 细胞死亡之前。
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Multimodal in-vivo maps as a tool to characterize retinal structural biomarkers for progression in adult-onset Stargardt disease
To characterize retinal structural biomarkers for progression in adult-onset Stargardt disease from multimodal retinal imaging in-vivo maps.Seven adult patients (29–69 years; 3 males) with genetically-confirmed and clinically diagnosed adult-onset Stargardt disease and age-matched healthy controls were imaged with confocal and non-confocal Adaptive Optics Scanning Light Ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO), optical coherence tomography (OCT), fundus infrared (FIR), short wavelength-autofluorescence (FAF) and color fundus photography (CFP). Images from each modality were scaled for differences in lateral magnification before montages of AOSLO images were aligned with en-face FIR, FAF and OCT scans to explore changes in retinal structure across imaging modalities. Photoreceptors, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, flecks, and other retinal alterations in macular regions were identified, delineated, and correlated across imaging modalities. Retinal layer-thicknesses were extracted from segmented OCT images in areas of normal appearance on clinical imaging and intact outer retinal structure on OCT. Eccentricity dependency in cell density was compared with retinal thickness and outer retinal layer thickness, evaluated across patients, and compared with data from healthy controls.In patients with Stargardt disease, alterations in retinal structure were visible in different image modalities depending on layer location and structural properties. The patients had highly variable foveal structure, associated with equally variable visual acuity (-0.02 to 0.98 logMAR). Cone and rod photoreceptors, as well as RPE-like structures in some areas, could be quantified on non-confocal split-detection AOSLO images. RPE cells were also visible on dark field AOSLO images close to the foveal center. Hypo-reflective gaps of non-waveguiding cones (dark cones) were seen on confocal AOSLO in regions with clinically normal CFP, FIR, FAF and OCT appearance and an intact cone inner segment mosaic in three patients.Dark cones were identified as a possible first sign of retinal disease progression in adult-onset Stargardt disease as these are observed in retinal locations with otherwise normal appearance and outer retinal thickness. This corroborates a previous report where dark cones were proposed as a first sign of progression in childhood-onset Stargardt disease. This also supports the hypothesis that, in Stargardt disease, photoreceptor degeneration occurs before RPE cell death.
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