Abstract
PurposeTo investigate the incidence of and risk factors for failure of detection of active fellow-eye neovascularization on optical coherence tomography(OCT) crosshair scans in patients with unilateral neovascular age-related macular degeneration(AMD).MethodsIn this retrospective study, patients who experienced the development of active neovascularization in the fellow eye during the follow-up period were included(n = 75). Cases in which the neovascularization in the fellow eye could be identified solely through crosshair scans were defined as the crosshair scan detection group(n = 63). Cases in which the aforementioned findings could not be identified through crosshair scans but could be identified through raster scans were defined as the raster scan detection group(n = 12). The factors were compared between the two groups. Risk factors related to undetected neovascularization on crosshair scans were additionally identified.ResultsActive fellow-eye neovascularization, was not detected on OCT crosshair scans in 12 cases(16.0%) but was identified on raster scans in all cases. There was a significant difference in the proportion of neovascularization types between the crosshair scan detection group and the raster scan detection group(P = 0.023). Among the 35 fellow-eye neovascularization cases in patients with type 3 macular neovascularization(MNV), 10(28.6%) were not detected on crosshair scans. Multivariate analysis revealed a significantly higher risk for undetectable fellow-eye neovascularization on crosshair scans in patients with type 3 MNV than in those with typical neovascular AMD(P = 0.037,β = 9.600).ConclusionsOur findings suggest the need for routine OCT raster scans during fellow-eye examinations in patients with unilateral neovascular AMD, particularly when the first-affected eye is diagnosed with type 3 MNV.
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