Abstract

PurposeTo report the characteristics and correlation of visual acuity in eyes treated for neovascular AMD (nAMD) and developed fibrosis. DesignCase-control study Methods356 treatment naive nAMD eyes that were treated for 12 months were included. Fibrosis was defined as present if well-defined hyperreflective material (HRM) between the neurosensory retina and the Bruchs’ membrane (BM) on optical coherence tomography (OCT) which correlated with well-defined regions of yellowish pallor on fundus photography and/or staining on fluorescence angiography were present. OCT features of sub foveal fibrosis and the overlying retina were correlated with visual acuity at month 12. Results20.3% developed incident fibrosis at month 12. Compared to eyes that did not develop fibrosis these eyes had lower baseline vision (49 vs 54 letters, p=0.02), more had type II macular neovascularisation (15.0 vs 8.8%, p=0.03), larger lesion area (29.6 vs 15.1 mm2, p=0.02) and sub-retinal haemorrhage ≥4 disc diameters (44.4% vs 19.8%, p<0.01). Visual acuity was worse in the incident fibrosis compared to the group that never developed fibrosis by month 12. (-1.4±17.1 versus +6.0±17.4 letters, p<0.01). In 83 eyes that had sub foveal fibrosis, better vision was associated with intact EZ/ELM complex (β coefficient (95% CI) 29.4 (14.2 to 44.6, p<0.01) while worse vision was associated with RPE-involving HRM, HRM above the RPE and width of HRM. (β coefficient (95% CI) -25.4 (-36.3 to -14.6, p<0.01), -23.5 (-39.0 to -7.9, p<0.01) and -3.8 (-7.2 to -0.4, p=0.03) respectively). ConclusionWhile fibrosis is associated with poorer visual outcome, preservation of ELM and level of fibrosis relative to the RPE are associated with visual outcomes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call