Abstract

Purpose To examine choroidal neovascularization (CNV) characteristics in patients with exudative age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV), using swept-source optical coherence tomography angiography (SS-OCTA), and investigate agreement with OCT B-scan, fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA), and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) by two different examiners. Methods This is a retrospective multicentric study that involved patients with a history of AMD and PCV. Examiner A, who had access to OCTA, B-scan OCT, FFA, and ICGA imaging, had to differentiate between AMD and PCV, study the activity of AMD using Coscas' criteria (active vs. quiescent), and categorize PCV subtypes, while examiner B had only access to OCTA. Then, the diagnostic concordance was assessed between both examiners. Results A total of 27 patients (11 females (40.7%) and 16 males (59.3%), P = 0.231) were included in the analysis. Among those, 13 patients presented with neovascular AMD and 14 patients with PCV. There were 92.3% of correct answers regarding appropriate diagnosis and lesion characterization among AMD patients, against 61.5% of correct answers among PCV patients. The overall interrater reliability agreement between examiners, using Cohen's kappa coefficient (κ) was 0.70 (0.5082-0.8916). Disagreement was found with one active AMD misdiagnosed as inactive AMD, three inactive PCV misdiagnosed as inactive AMD, and one inactive PCV misdiagnosed as active AMD. Conclusion SS-OCTA alone remains limited in some specific phenotypes of PCV, which suggests the ongoing role of B-scan OCT associated with FFA and ICGA in the diagnosis of these conditions.

Highlights

  • Polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV) is a clinical entity, with its own characteristics, distinctive from neovascular agerelated macular degeneration (AMD)

  • The purpose of this study is to determine the agreement between swept-source optical coherence tomography angiography (SS-optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA)) and multimodal imaging with fluorescein fundus angiography (FFA), indocyanine green angiography (ICGA), and OCT-B-scan in the diagnosis of PCV and evaluation of neovascular activity

  • PCV is a disease characterized by polypoidal-like dilated choroidal vessels linked to interconnecting channels or a branching vascular network (BVN) [12]

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Summary

Introduction

Polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV) is a clinical entity, with its own characteristics, distinctive from neovascular agerelated macular degeneration (AMD). It is a vascular disease of the choroid characterized by an abnormal branching vascular network (BVN) and aneurysmal dilations called polyps. These subretinal polypoidal vascular lesions may be associated with serous and hemorrhagic pigment epithelial detachments (PED) [1,2,3,4] PCV is the most impactful subtype of AMD. BioMed Research International the exudation comes in the form of either serous PED, subretinal fluid, serous macular detachment, subretinal lipid exudation, or intraretinal fluid, whereas hemorrhagic PCV presents with subretinal or subretinal pigment epithelium (RPE) hemorrhage [6]

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