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Subclinical subretinal fluid detectable only by optical coherence tomography in choroidal naevi-the SON study

Yazar
Fraser-Bell, Samantha
Gabrielle, Pierre-Henry
Giancipoli, Ermete
Loewenstein, Anat
Cebeci, Zafer
Rishi, Pukhraj
Rehak, Matus
Amphornphruet, Atchara
Chotcomwongse, Peranut
Chen, Yan Hong
Pellegrini, Marco
Rodriguez-Valdez, Patricio J.
Fung, Adrian T.
Guan, Raymond
Forlani, Veronica
Li, Yi-Chiao
Chhablani, Jay
Maltsev, Dmitrii S.
Zur, Dinah
Iglicki, Matias
Couturier, Aude
Shinojima, Ari
Almeida, Ana C.
Busch, Catharina
Lupidi, Marco
Cagini, Carlo
Ozimek, Malgorzata
Sala-Puigdollers, Anna
Lains, Ines
Okada, Mali
Chaikitmongkol, Voraporn
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Özet
Background Subretinal fluid is a risk factor for growth and malignant transformation of choroidal naevi, however it is unclear if this applies to subclinical fluid that is only detectable by optical coherence tomography (OCT). The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence and associations of subclinical but OCT-detectable subretinal fluid over choroidal naevi. Methods Cross-sectional study of 309 consecutive cases of choroidal naevi imaged by OCT between July 2017 to January 2019. Multicentre international study involving ten retinal specialist centres. All patients presenting to retinal specialists had routine clinical examination and OCT imaging. The prevalence of subclinical OCT-detectable subretinal fluid over choroidal naevi and its associations with other features known to predict growth and malignant transformation were noted and analysed. Results Of 309 identified consecutive cases, the mean patient age was 65 years, 89.3% of patients were Caucasian and 3.9% were Asian. The prevalence of subclinical but OCT-detectable subretinal fluid associated with choroidal naevi was 11.7% (36/309). Naevi with fluid were associated with larger basal diameters, greater thickness, presence of a halo, orange pigmentation, hyperautofluorescence, and hypodensity on B-scan ultrasonography. Conclusion and relevance Of choroidal naevi where subretinal fluid is not visible on clinical examination, 11.7% demonstrate subretinal fluid on OCT scans. These naevi more commonly exhibit features known to be associated with growth and transformation to melanoma. The presence of subclinical OCT-detectable fluid over choroidal naevi may assist in their risk stratification.
Bağlantı
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/3008
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41433-020-01206-1
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