BMC Ophthalmology (Jan 2021)

Choroidal and peripapillary changes in high myopic eyes with Stickler syndrome

  • Olivia Xerri,
  • Federico Bernabei,
  • Elise Philippakis,
  • Cyril Burin-Des-Roziers,
  • Pierre-Olivier Barale,
  • Olivier Laplace,
  • Claire Monin,
  • Dominique Bremond-Gignac,
  • Gilles Guerrier,
  • Sophie Valleix,
  • Antoine Brezin,
  • Pierre-Raphaël Rothschild

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12886-020-01777-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background To compare different clinical and Spectral-Domain Optical Coherence Tomography (SD-OCT) features of high myopic eyes with Stickler syndrome (STL) with matched controls. Methods Patients with genetically confirmed STL with axial length ≥ 26 mm and controls matched for axial length were included. The following data were obtained from SD-OCT scans and fundus photography: choroidal and retinal thickness (respectively, CT and RT), peripapillary atrophy area (PAA), presence of posterior staphyloma (PS). Results Twenty-six eyes of 17 patients with STL and 25 eyes of 19 controls were evaluated. Compared with controls, patients with STL showed a greater CT subfoveally, at 1000 μm from the fovea at both nasal and temporal location, and at 2000 and 3000 μm from the fovea in nasal location (respectively, 188.7±72.8 vs 126.0±88.7 μm, 172.5±77.7 vs 119.3±80.6 μm, 190.1±71.9 vs 134.9±79.7 μm, 141.3±56.0 vs 98.1±68.5 μm, and 110.9±51.0 vs 67.6±50.7 μm, always P< 0.05). Furthermore, patients with STL showed a lower prevalence of PS (11.5% vs 68%, P< 0.001) and a lower PAA (2.2±2.1 vs 5.4±5.8 mm2, P=0.03), compared with controls. Conclusions This study shows that high myopic patients with STL show a greater CT, a lower PAA and a lower prevalence of PS, compared with controls matched for axial length. These findings could be relevant for the development and progression of myopic maculopathy in patients with STL.

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