Abstract

To describe the clinical and imaging features of sarcoid granuloma of the choroid and ciliary body. Retrospective case series of patients with choroid and/or ciliary body sarcoid granuloma managed at the Ocular Oncology Service at Wills Eye Hospital. The mean patient age at diagnosis was 51.0 years (54.1, 11.0-83.8 years). The mean logMAR visual acuity at presentation was 0.3 (0.2, 0.0-3.0) [Snellen equivalent 20/40 (20/30, HM-20/20)]. Clinical features included mean basal dimension of 5.2 mm (4.0, 0.3-20.0 mm) and thickness of 1.7 mm (1.8, 0.0-3.6 mm), yellow color (41, 82%), multifocality (18, 36%), and irregular vermiform margins (46, 92%). Related clinical features included inflammation of the anterior chamber (1, 2%), vitreous (5, 10%), and retina (5, 10%). Imaging features by optical coherence tomography of the choroid lesions (n = 49) demonstrated clear subretinal fluid (6, 12%), "dirty" subretinal fluid (14, 28%), cystoid macular edema (1, 2%), overlying retinal edema (6, 12%), and localized vitreous cellularity (1, 2%). Management included sub-Tenon's triamcinolone (11, 22%), intravitreal triamcinolone (3, 6%), systemic corticosteroids (19, 38%), or observation (26, 52%). Systemic sarcoidosis was present before ocular diagnosis (13, 26%), detected during ophthalmic care (4, 8%), detected after ocular diagnosis (3, 6%), or not found (30, 60%) over a mean follow-up of 13.7 months (6.9, 0.0-138.2). Sarcoid granuloma of the choroid and/or ciliary body can manifest without anterior segment or vitreous/retina inflammation in many cases and reveal underlying systemic sarcoidosis in 40% of cases. A distinguishing feature of choroidal sarcoid granuloma was its vermiform margin.

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