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- Title
Association between the arm-to-choroidal circulation time and clinical profile in patients with polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy.
- Authors
Mukai, Ryo; Itagaki, Kanako; Honjyo, Jyunichiro; Tanaka, Keiichiro; Norikawa, Koki; Sekiryu, Tetsuju
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the association between the arm-to-choroidal circulation time (ACT) on indocyanine green angiography (IA) and clinical profile in patients with polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV). Study design: Single-center retrospective study. Methods: We included 38 eyes of 38 patients with PCV diagnosed using multimodal imaging and did not undergo previous treatment. All patients were treated with monthly aflibercept injections for 3 months and treat-and-extend regimens for the subsequent 12 months. Posterior vortex vein ACT was assessed on the first visit using Heidelberg IA. The patients were divided into two groups: ACT ≥20 s (L group; eight eyes) and ACT <20 s (S group; 30 eyes). The clinical profiles before and after treatment were analyzed to assess associations with ACT. Results: The mean ACT was 16.39±3.3 s (L group: 21.25±1.49 s, women:men=2:6, mean age: 77.3±6.5 years; S group: 15.10±2.17 s, women:men=7:23, mean age: 75.5±6.9 years). No significant difference was observed in the mean subfoveal choroidal thickness between the L and the S groups (176±75 μm vs. 230±79 μm, P=0.10). However, there were significant differences between the L and S groups in retinal fluid accumulation and hemorrhage recurrence (eight/eight eyes, 100% vs. 13/30 eyes, 43%, P<0.001), mean aflibercept injections (8.8±1.6 vs. 7.0±1.6, P<0.01) during the 12-month period, and the number of polypoidal lesions (1.8±0.7 vs. 1.3±0.5, P<0.05). Conclusion: Patients with PCV and ACT >20 s are more likely to experience exudative change recurrence in the retina during treatment because they have more polypoidal lesions.
- Subjects
POLYPOIDAL choroidal vasculopathy; CHOROID; INDOCYANINE green; FLUORESCENCE angiography
- Publication
Japanese Journal of Ophthalmology, 2024, Vol 68, Issue 3, p211
- ISSN
0021-5155
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10384-024-01057-3