Abstract

To investigate whether transvascular indocyanine green (ICG) dye leakage is associated with conjunctival malignancy. This is a prospective interventional study. Patients presenting with circumscribed conjunctival melanocytic disorders (CMDs) were included and examined using color photography, anterior segment optical coherence tomography to measure lesion size, and fluorescein and ICG angiography to measure vascular pattern and leakage. Time to vascular leakage was measured by 2 independent observers. Lesions were characterized as benign or malignant based on histopathological features. Thirty patients with CMD were included: 22 lesions were benign (conjunctival nevus, n = 20; conjunctival melanocytic intraepithelial neoplasia without atypia, n = 2) and 8 were malignant (in situ conjunctival melanoma n = 2; invasive conjunctival melanoma, n = 6). Malignant lesions had larger mean maximal diameters (11.0 ± 4.5 vs. 4.2 ± 2.5 mm, P = 0.003) and more frequently showed intrinsic tumor vasculature (8 of 8 vs. 10 of 22, P = 0.007). The mean time to ICG leakage was 350.9 ± 165.9 seconds in benign and 59.6 ± 22.1 seconds (P = 0.002) in malignant lesions and was inversely correlated with lesion size and thickness. Time to angiographic ICG dye leakage is significantly shorter in malignant versus benign CMD.

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