Transl Vis Sci Technol
Transl Vis Sci TechnolJuly 2019Journal Article

Diagnostic Ability of Macular Vessel Density in the Ganglion Cell-Inner Plexiform Layer on Optical Coherence Tomographic Angiography for Glaucoma.

Visual FieldOptic Nerve & Disc

Summary

The present study demonstrated that macular vessel density in the ganglion cell-IPL has a higher diagnostic ability and better correlation with functional damage in glaucoma than that in the superficial vascular plexus.

Abstract

PURPOSE

The purpose of this study was to analyze the macular vessel density layer-by-layer and compare the diagnostic value of each in diagnosing glaucoma.

METHODS

This was a prospective comparative cross-sectional study, and the setting was glaucoma referral practice. The study participants were patients with primary open-angle glaucoma undergoing treatment with drugs, and age-matched normal controls who visited our clinic for regular eye examinations for refractive errors. All participants were investigated using macular optical coherence tomographic angiography, fundus photography, and 24-2 visual field (VF) testing. Average vessel densities in the retinal nerve fiber-ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer (IPL), retinal nerve fiber-ganglion cell layer (GCL), retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL), ganglion cell-IPL, GCL, and IPL segments on optical coherence tomographic angiography.

RESULTS

Fifty-eight glaucomatous eyes of 58 participants and 52 healthy eyes of 52 normal subjects were included in the study. The average vessel densities of all segments, except the RNFL in the glaucoma group, were significantly lower than that in normal subjects. The average vessel density in the ganglion cell-IPL showed the highest correlation with the mean deviation and VF index of the VF (= 0.515 and 0.538, respectively) and the best area under receiver operating characteristic curve to discriminate between patients with glaucoma and patients with normal eyes (0.750).

CONCLUSIONS

The present study demonstrated that macular vessel density in the ganglion cell-IPL has a higher diagnostic ability and better correlation with functional damage in glaucoma than that in the superficial vascular plexus.

TRANSLATIONAL RELEVANCE

These findings suggest that the macular vessel density in the ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer is better than that in the conventional superficial vascular plexus for detecting glaucoma.

Keywords

ganglion cell–inner plexiform layerglaucomamacular vessel densityoptical coherence tomographic angiography

Discussion

Comments and discussion will appear here in a future update.