Plexus-Specific Detection of Retinal Vascular Pathologic Conditions with Projection-Resolved OCT Angiography.

Journal: Ophthalmology. Retina
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the projection-resolved (PR) optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) algorithm in detecting plexus-specific vascular abnormalities in retinal pathologies.

Methods: Cross-sectional observational clinical study. Methods: Patients diagnosed with retinal vascular diseases and healthy volunteers. Methods: Eyes were imaged using an OCT system operating at 840 nm and employing the split-spectrum amplitude decorrelation algorithm. A novel algorithm suppressed projection artifacts inherent to OCTA. The volumetric scans were segmented and visualized on different plexuses. Methods: Qualitative observation of vascular abnormalities on both cross-sectional and en face PR-OCTA images.

Results: Eight illustrative cases are reported. In cases of diabetic retinopathy, retinal vessel occlusion, and retinitis pigmentosa, PR-OCTA detected retinal nonperfusion regions within deeper retinal plexuses not visualized by conventional OCTA. In age-related macular degeneration, cross-sectional PR-OCTA permitted the classification of choroidal neovascularization, and, in a case of retinal angiomatous proliferation, identified a vertical vessel contiguous with the deep capillary plexus. In macular telangiectasia, PR-OCTA detected a diving perifoveal vein and delineated subretinal neovascularization.

Conclusions: Application of PR-OCTA promises to improve sensitive, accurate evaluation of individual vascular plexuses in multiple retinal diseases.

Authors
Rachel Patel, Jie Wang, Thomas Hwang, Miao Zhang, Simon Gao, Mark Pennesi, Steven Bailey, Brandon Lujan, Xiaogang Wang, David Wilson, David Huang, Yali Jia