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Invest Ophthalmol Vis SciJuly 201818 citations

Increased Inner Retinal Layer Reflectivity in Eyes With Acute CRVO Correlates With Worse Visual Outcomes at 12 Months.

Mehta Nitish, Lavinsky Fabio, Gattoussi Sarra, Seiler Michael, Wald Kenneth J, Ishikawa Hiroshi, Wollstein Gadi, Schuman Joel, Freund K Bailey, Singh Rishi


AI Summary

In acute CRVO, increased ganglion cell layer reflectivity and its heterogeneity at one month predict worse 12-month visual outcomes, potentially offering a clinical prognostic tool.

Abstract

Purpose

To determine if inner retinal layer reflectivity in eyes with acute central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) correlates with visual acuity at 12 months.

Methods

Macular optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans were obtained from 22 eyes of 22 patients with acute CRVO. Optical intensity ratios (OIRs), defined as the mean OCT reflectivity of the inner retinal layers normalized to the mean reflectivity of the RPE, were measured from the presenting and 1-month OCT image by both manual measurements of grayscale B-scans and custom algorithmic measurement of raw OCT volume data. OIRs were assessed for association with final visual outcome. Cohort subgroup division for analysis was determined statistically.

Results

Eyes with poorer final visual acuity (≥20/70) at 1 year were more likely to have a higher ganglion cell layer OIR than eyes with better final visual acuity (<20/70) at 1 month (manually: 0.591 to 0.735, P = 0.006, algorithmically: 0.663 to 0.799, P = 0.014). At 1 month, eyes with a poorer final visual acuity demonstrated a higher variance of OIR measurements (algorithmically: 0.087 vs. 0.160, P = 0.002) per scan than eyes with better final visual acuity.

Conclusions

In acute CRVO, ganglion cell layer changes at 1 month, including increased reflectivity and increased heterogeneity of reflectivity signal as expressed as OIR and OIR variance, were associated with a poorer visual prognosis at 1 year. Technique calibration with larger sample sizes and automated integration into OCT platforms will be necessary to determine if OIR can be a clinically useful prognostic tool.


MeSH Terms

Acute DiseaseAgedAged, 80 and overAngiogenesis InhibitorsFemaleHumansIntravitreal InjectionsMaleMiddle AgedRetinal Ganglion CellsRetinal Pigment EpitheliumRetinal Vein OcclusionRetrospective StudiesTomography, Optical CoherenceVascular Endothelial Growth Factor AVision DisordersVisual Acuity

Key Concepts3

In eyes with acute central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO), those with poorer final visual acuity (≥20/70) at 1 year were more likely to have a higher ganglion cell layer optical intensity ratio (OIR) at 1 month (manually: 0.591 to 0.735, P = 0.006; algorithmically: 0.663 to 0.799, P = 0.014) than eyes with better final visual acuity (<20/70).

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=22 eyes of 22 patients with acute CRVOCh5

At 1 month, eyes with acute central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) that demonstrated a poorer final visual acuity (≥20/70) at 1 year showed a higher variance of optical intensity ratio (OIR) measurements (algorithmically: 0.087 vs. 0.160, P = 0.002) per scan than eyes with better final visual acuity (<20/70).

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=22 eyes of 22 patients with acute CRVOCh5

In acute central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO), ganglion cell layer changes at 1 month, including increased reflectivity and increased heterogeneity of reflectivity signal (expressed as optical intensity ratio (OIR) and OIR variance), were associated with a poorer visual prognosis at 1 year.

PrognosisCohortProspective Cohort Studyn=22 eyes of 22 patients with acute CRVOCh5

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