International Journal of Retina and Vitreous (Aug 2019)

Vascularized drusen: a cross-sectional study

  • Chris Or,
  • Jeffrey S. Heier,
  • David Boyer,
  • David Brown,
  • Sumit Shah,
  • Agha Yasin Alibhai,
  • James G. Fujimoto,
  • Nadia Waheed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40942-019-0187-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background To investigate whether neovascularization may arise and be detectable in drusen, as reported in histopathologic studies, by OCTA prior to developing exudation and to assess its prevalence in a cohort of patients with intermediate AMD. Methods Retrospective cross-sectional study of 128 patients with intermediate AMD recruited as part of a separate ongoing clinical trial conducted at multiple large tertiary referral retina clinics. One hundred and twenty-eight consecutive patients with exudative AMD in one eye and intermediate non-exudative AMD in the fellow eye were enrolled and analyzed between September 2015 and March 2017. Results SD-OCTA identified vascularization within drusen in 7 of 128 eyes, for a prevalence of 5.5%. A total of 12 instances of vascularized drusen were noted. Out of the 12 vascularized drusen noted, 7 were located in the parafoveal region or subfoveal region and 5 was in the extrafoveal region. 9 of 12 instances of vascularized drusen exhibited a uniform sub-RPE hyperreflectivity, whilst 3 of 12 exhibited more heterogenous reflectivity. In all 12 instances, FA images failed to identify the neovascular nature of vascularized drusen. Conclusions Our results demonstrate the utility of SD-OCTA for the diagnosis of vascularized drusen in patients with intermediate non-exudative AMD. Longitudinal studies are needed to delineate the evolution and conversion risk of these lesions over time, which can be of substantial clinical relevance.

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