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Changes of choroidal structure after corticosteroid treatment in eyes with Vogt–Koyanagi–Harada disease

Authors :
Kentaro Semba
Yoshinori Mitamura
Shozo Sonoda
Eisuke Uchino
Mariko Egawa
Takamasa Kinoshita
Kei Akaiwa
Taiji Sakamoto
Source :
British Journal of Ophthalmology. 100:1646-1650
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
BMJ, 2016.

Abstract

To report the changes of the choroidal structure in the enhanced depth imaging optical coherence tomographic (EDI-OCT) images after high-dose corticosteroid treatment for acute Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH) disease.Retrospective, observational case series. Thirty-four eyes of 17 patients with acute VKH disease were examined by EDI-OCT before, and 1, 4 and 52 weeks after the treatment. The EDI-OCT images were binarised by ImageJ, a publicly accessible software. The luminal, stromal and total choroidal areas and ratio of luminal/stromal area (L/S ratio) were measured in the subfoveal choroid of 1500 µm width. The area of the peripapillary atrophy (PPA) was measured in the fundus photographs at 1 and 52 weeks. For statistical analyses, a generalised estimating equation method was used to eliminate the effect of within-subject intereye correlations.Before treatment, the EDI-OCT images could not be binarised because of poor image quality in most of the cases. After treatment, the luminal, stromal and total choroidal areas were significantly decreased during the follow-up period (all p0.05). The L/S ratio significantly fluctuated over time (p=0.0201), and was significantly lower at 4 weeks than at 1 week (p=0.0158). The L/S ratio at 1 week was significantly correlated with increase in the PPA area, subsequent chronic recurrences and total dose of corticosteroid (p0.0001, p=0.0006, p=0.0037, respectively).The L/S ratio measured by binarisation of EDI-OCT images was predictive factor for the progression of PPA, subsequent chronic recurrences and total dose of corticosteroid, and may serve as a marker for degree of choroidal inflammation in the VKH disease.

Details

ISSN :
14682079 and 00071161
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Ophthalmology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b18f5a0f5c84596a0d29209124bcc129