Regional Vessel Density Reduction in the Macula and Optic Nerve Head of Patients With Pre-Perimetric Primary Open Angle Glaucoma.
Vercellin Alice Verticchio, Brent Siesky, Gal Antman, Francesco Oddone, Michael Chang, George Eckert, Julia Arciero, Rebecca L Kellner, Brendan Fry, Janet Coleman-Belin, Carmela Carnevale, Alon Harris
Summary
In ppOAG patients, VD biomarkers in both the macula and ONH, alongside RNFL, GCC, and macular thickness, were significantly reduced before detectable visual field loss with regional specificity.
Abstract
PRCIS
Capillary and neuronal tissue loss occur both globally and with regional specificity in pre-perimetric glaucoma patients at the level of the optic nerve and macula, with perifovea regions affected earlier than parafovea areas.
PURPOSE
To investigate optic nerve head (ONH) and macular vessel densities (VD) and structural parameters assessed by optical coherence tomography angiography in pre-perimetric open angle glaucoma (ppOAG) patients and healthy controls.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
In all, 113 healthy and 79 ppOAG patients underwent global and regional (hemispheric/quadrants) assessments of retinal, ONH, and macular vascularity and structure, including ONH parameters, retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) and ganglion cell complex (GCC) thickness. Comparisons between outcomes in ppOAG and controls were adjusted for age, sex, race, BMI, diabetes, and hypertension, with P 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
In ppOAG patients, VD biomarkers in both the macula and ONH, alongside RNFL, GCC, and macular thickness, were significantly reduced before detectable visual field loss with regional specificity. The most significant VD reduction detected was in the peripheric (perifovea) regions. Macular and ONH decrease in VD may serve as early biomarkers of glaucomatous disease.
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