Diagnostics (Jan 2022)

Choroidal and Choriocapillaris Morphology in Pan-FGFR Inhibitor-Associated Retinopathy: A Case Report

  • Giuseppe Fasolino,
  • Laura Moschetta,
  • Jacques De Grève,
  • Pieter Nelis,
  • Pierre Lefesvre,
  • Marcel Ten Tusscher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics12020249
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 249

Abstract

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Emerging anticancer agents such as the pan-FGFR Inhibitor have achieved remarkable improvements in the survival of patients with metastatic malignancies. Nevertheless they are still associated with specific ophthalmic toxicities. Understanding their pathophysiology can lead us to better clinical practice of life-threatening and vision-threatening circumstances. To investigate choroidal alterations as a potential pathophysiological mechanism of a serous detachment in bilateral pan-FGFR Inhibitor-Associated Retinopathy (FGFRAR), the morphology of the choroid and choriocapillaris were assessed. The choroidal thickness (ChT) and choriocapillaris flow void were measured by macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) and angiography (OCT-A), respectively. Data were collected at the baseline, then at one-month and two-months follow-ups after starting erdafitinib, in a single case of pulmonary angiosarcoma. Choroidal and choriocapillaris morphology showed stable ChT and choriocapillaris flow void at FGFRAR onset and relapse. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first analyzed case reported with flow-void OCT-angiography. Considering these results, FGFRAR in this patient does not seem to match the pachychoroid spectrum disorder definition; rather, an intracellular mechanism based on intracellular transduction pathways may be at work.

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