Choroidal vascularity index in thyroid eye disease: comparison with controls and application in diagnosing non-inflammatory active disease.

Journal: Orbit (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To report the differences in choroidal vascularity index (CVI) in thyroid eye disease (TED) and normals and its discriminatory value for differentiating various stages of TED.

Methods: Prospective, cross-sectional, non-interventional imaging study. Ninety-four eyes of 54 patients were included and divided into 5 groups - normal controls (C), inactive TED (I), active TED (A), non-inflammatory active TED (NIA) and systemic hyperthyroid disorder but no TED (SYS). Choroidal images were acquired using the swept-source optical coherence tomography and the choroid was binarized to calculate the CVI.

Results: Ninety-four eyes were included. Mean age was 44.52 ± 10.02 years (median 46 years, range 19-65 years). Mean IOP was 16.1 ± 3.37 mm Hg (median 16 mm Hg, range 16-24 mm Hg). Mean Spherical equivalent (SE) was -0.08 ± 1.86 diopters (median 0, range -2.5 to +2.25). Intra-rater agreement was 0.84 (p < 0.001). Inter-rater agreement was noted to be 0.85 (p < 0.001) for consistency and 0.77 (p < 0.001) for absolute agreement. CVI in the A group was 70.11 ± 3.38% and in the NIA group was 69.32 ± 3.5%. Both were comparable to each other and significantly higher than the C, I and SYS groups (p < 0.001). Multiple regression showed that the Clinical Activity Score (CAS) had a positive effect and spheroequivalent had a negative effect on the CVI. At CVI of 66.83%, active TED can be diagnosed with sensitivity of 91.67% and specificity of 82.14%                 .

Conclusions: CVI is significantly higher in active TED and NIA TED compared to other groups. It has a good value in differentiating the non-inflammatory active TED eyes from the inactive eyes.