Abstract

To develop a diagnostic algorithm in patients with pathologic myopia who present with typical symptoms or signs of myopic choroidal neovascularisation (mCNV). Retrospective study. Patients with high myopia and suspected mCNV underwent fluorescein angiography (FFA), structural spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA). Active mCNV on one imaging modality plus clinical features were considered as the benchmark reference for the other two tests. Sensitivity was calculated for each modality individually and in combination. Morphological features were noted on SD-OCT and OCTA. Twenty-seven eyes of 26 patients were analysed. Sensitivity of SD-OCT or FFA alone was 85.19% (23/27 eyes). Sensitivity of OCTA was 74.07% (20/27 eyes). The sensitivity for SD-OCT combined with OCTA was 96.16% and combined with FFA was 97.80%. On OCTA, a "tight net" appearance was seen in 16 eyes (80%); a core vessel was visible in seven eyes (35%), all with active lesions. A "perilesional halo" was visible in 11 eyes (55%) of which 10 had active lesions. When combined, OCTA and SD-OCT or SD-OCT and FFA showed similar higher sensitivities than each modality alone. A tight vascular net and the combination of a perilesional halo and a visible core on OCTA may serve as biomarkers of mCNV activity.

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