Abstract

To evaluate choroidal findings on multimodal imaging in eyes within pachychoroid spectrum diseases and to compare quantitative and qualitative choroidal features between non-neovascular (NNV-PDS) and neovascular (NV-PDS) pachychoroid diseases. Retrospective cross-sectional study comparing between NV-PDS and NNV-PDS. All patients underwent multimodal imaging including infracyanine green angiography (IFCGA) and swept source optical coherence tomography (OCT) and angiography (OCT-A). The following parameters were analyzed: subfoveal choroidal thickness (SFCT), choroidal vascular index (CVI), presence of pachyvessels and choroidal vascular interconnections (CVIC), presence of choroidal neovascularization and choriocapillaris density. Of the 87 eyes included in the study, 63 eyes (73%) had NNV-PDS and 24 eyes (27%) had NV-PDS. Mean SFCT and CVI were significantly higher in NNV-PDS group (p = 0.01; p = 0.022). Pachyvessels were more diffusely distributed in NNV-PD group and more focally distributed in NV-PDS group (p = 0.029). CVIC were more frequently noted in NV-PDS group (p = 0.024). A higher CVI was associated to a thicker choroid (p < 0.001), with significant negative correlations between the presence of CVIC and both SFCT (p = 0.015) and CVI (p = 0.002). We also observed a lower choriocapillaris vascular density and higher number of choriocapillaris flow voids in eyes with NNV-PDS (p = 0.24; p = 0.61). NNV-PDS eyes had a significantly thicker SFCT, higher CVI and a lower rate of detected CVIC than eyes with NV-PDS. These highlighted choroidal vascular changes might lead to a better understanding of pachychoroid disease pathophysiology. More frequently observed in NV-PDS group, CVIC are believed to assess the development of vortex vein anastomoses as a remodelling process for vascular decongestion.

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