Scientific Reports (Sep 2022)

Sub-retinal pigment epithelium tubules in non-neovascular age-related macular degeneration

  • Serena Fragiotta,
  • Mariacristina Parravano,
  • Riccardo Sacconi,
  • Eliana Costanzo,
  • Daniele De Geronimo,
  • Francesco Prascina,
  • Vittorio Capuano,
  • Eric H. Souied,
  • Ian C. Han,
  • Robert Mullins,
  • Giuseppe Querques

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-19193-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract To describe a novel optical coherence tomography (OCT) signature resembling sub-retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) tubules (SRT) in non-neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Patients suffering from non-neovascular AMD with complete medical records and multimodal imaging were retrospectively revised in three different tertiary care centers. Multimodal imaging included color fundus photograph, spectral-domain OCT (Spectralis, Heidelberg Engineering, Germany), fundus autofluorescence, OCT angiography (RTVue XR Avanti, Optovue, Inc., Fremont, CA). A total of 7 eyes of 7 patients with drusenoid pigment epithelium detachment (PED) were consecutively analyzed. The sub-RPE tubules appeared as ovoidal structures with a hyperreflective contour and hyporeflective interior appreciable in the sub-RPE-basal lamina (BL) space on OCT B-scan. The anatomical location of the sub-RPE formations was lying above the Bruch’s membrane in 5/7 cases (71.4%) or floating in the sub-RPE-BL space in 2/7 cases (28.6%). En-face OCTA revealed a curvilinear tubulation-like structure corresponding to SRT without flow signal. Sub-RPE tubules represent a newly identified OCT signature observed in eyes with drusenoid PED. The presumed origin may include a variant of calcified structure or alternatively activated RPE cells with some residual BL or basal laminar deposits attracted to BrM for craving oxygen.