Diagnostics (Feb 2023)

Focal Choroidal Excavation: Epidemiology, Clinical Characteristics and Multimodal Imaging Findings

  • Paulina Szabelska,
  • Justyna Mędrzycka,
  • Joanna Brydak-Godowska,
  • Radosław Różycki,
  • Joanna Gołębiewska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13040602
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 602

Abstract

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Background: Focal choroidal excavation (FCE) is one of the pachychoroid spectrum diseases. It may be an isolated lesion or associated with other ophthalmological disorders. The aim of the study was to present the epidemiology, clinical features and multimodal imaging findings in FCE. Methods: This is a case series of 14 consecutive patients with a diagnosis of FCE, confirmed by multimodal imaging, from a review of the 5076 optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans in 2538 patients. Choroidal thickness (CT) was measured under the fovea and in the area of maximum choroidal thickening in the affected eye and under the fovea in the fellow eye. Results: The mean age of the subjects was 40 ± 13.58 years. FCE occurred unilaterally and was an isolated lesion in all cases. The fellow eye did not show any macular pathology in all patients. Twelve eyes presented conforming FCEs and two non–conforming FCEs. In 79% of cases, FCE was subfoveal. The mean maximum CT was 390 μm in the affected eye with the presence of pachyvessels. A total of 13 patients were asymptomatic, while one patient reported a visual disturbance due to neovascularization secondary to FCE. Of all the multimodal imaging techniques, optical coherence tomography (OCT) provided the most important data in the diagnosis of FCE. Conclusions: Our study confirmed that FCE is a rare ocular condition, but it may be more common in Caucasian population than previously known. Multimodal imaging methods, mainly OCT, are crucial in FCE diagnostics. Further studies are needed to expand the available knowledge about its etiology and clinical course.

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