| Literature DB >> 30209691 |
Aniruddha Agarwal1, Alessandro Invernizzi2, Rohan Bir Singh3, William Foulsham3, Kanika Aggarwal1, Sabia Handa1, Rupesh Agrawal4,5,6, Carlos Pavesio5, Vishali Gupta7.
Abstract
Inflammatory choroidal neovascular membranes are challenging to diagnose and manage. A number of uveitic entities may be complicated by the development of choroidal neovascularization leading to a decrease in central visual acuity. In conditions such as punctate inner choroidopathy, development of choroidal neovascularization is extremely common and must be suspected in all cases. On the other hand, in patients with conditions such as serpiginous choroiditis, and multifocal choroiditis, it may be difficult to differentiate between inflammatory choroiditis lesions and choroidal neovascularization. Multimodal imaging analysis, including the recently introduced technology of optical coherence tomography angiography, greatly aid in the diagnosis and management of inflammatory choroidal neovascularization. Management of these neovascular membranes consists of anti-vascular growth factor agents, with or without concomitant anti-inflammatory and/or corticosteroid therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Choroiditis; EDI-OCT; Fluorescein angiography; Indocyanine green angiography; Inflammatory choroidal neovascularization; Optical coherence tomography angiography; Posterior uveitis; Uveitis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30209691 PMCID: PMC6135736 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-018-0155-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Various uveitic entities associated with inflammatory choroidal neovascular membranes
| Non-infectious | Choroiditis | Multifocal choroiditis |
| Punctate inner choroidopathy | ||
| Acute multifocal placoid pigment epitheliopathy | ||
| Birdshot chorioretinitis | ||
| Multiple evanescent white dot syndrome | ||
| Stromal choroiditis | Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada syndrome | |
| Sympathetic ophthalmia | ||
| Panuveitis | Behcet’s disease | |
| Sarcoidosis | ||
| Multifocal choroiditis with panuveitis | ||
| Miscellaneous | Idiopathic panuveitis | |
| Tubulointerstitial nephritis and uveitis | ||
| Infectious | Bacterial | Mycobacterium tuberculosis (serpiginous choroiditis) |
| Protozoal | Toxoplasmosis | |
| Viruses | West Nile virus | |
| Rubella retinopathy | ||
| Fungi |
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| Helminth | Toxocara | |
| Others | Endophthalmitis |
Features of inflammatory choroidal neovascularization (CNV) commonly associated with infectious uveitis
| Presumed Ocular Histoplasmosis Syndrome (POHS) [ | Toxoplasmosis [ | Intraocular tuberculosis [ | West Nile virus chorioretinitis [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence | Frequent; present in majority cases | Estimated between 0.3–19% | Uncommon; prevalence not known | Only few cases (< 5) reported |
| Location of CNV | CNV is seen at the edge of a pre-existing scar in the macular or peripapillary region | CNV typically grows close to the edge of an atrophic chorioretinal scar | CNV is typically adjacent to the healed choroidal granuloma or to a healed choroiditis scar | CNV is adjacent to chorioretinal scars |
| Morphology of CNV | Active lesions have a disciform appearance at the macula, with a green-gray subretinal lacy discoloration and surrounding pigment. Inactive CNV appears as a white disciform scar with fibrovascular tissue | Active CNV appears as an outer retinal lesion close to the scar with associated hemorrhages and intra- or subretinal fluid. | CNV may present as a subretinal lesion with hemorrhages and intra- or subretinal fluid. Rarely, type 1 CNV may be detected only using imaging | CNV presents as a chorioretinal lesion with subretinal fluid and area of retinal hemorrhage |
| Associated inflammatory lesions | The triad of POHS includes the presence of peripapillary atrophy or pigmentation, histo spots (focal round-shaped chorioretinal lesions), and absence of overlying vitritis | Recurrent disease appears as an oval or circular whitish focal area of retinochoroiditis in the periphery of old atrophic lesions; dense overlying vitritis (headlight-in-fog); perivasculitis with diffuse venous sheathing; segmental arteriolar plaques | Choroiditis may have amoeboid lesions with central healing and active margins (serpiginous choroiditis) or it may present with choroidal granulomas | There is multifocal chorioretinitis with vitritis; multiple active chorioretinal lesions have the appearance of deep, creamy lesions and are 200–1000 μm in size. Inactive lesions are partly atrophic and partly pigmented with a “target-like appearance.” |
Features of inflammatory choroidal neovascularization (CNV) commonly associated with non-infectious uveitis
| Multifocal choroiditis [ | Punctate inner choroidopathy (PIC) [ | Serpiginous choroiditis [ | Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease (VKH) [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalence | 33–50% cases | 76–100% cases | 10–25% cases | 9–15% |
| Location of CNV | Associated with inflammatory lesions in the subfoveal or extrafoveal region | Highly focal; associated with inflammatory lesions in the macula | CNV is located near chorioretinal lesions in peripapillary, subfoveal, or extrafoveal areas | Usually extrafoveal; can be subfoveal and associated with chorioretinal scar |
| Morphology of CNV | CNV appear as subretinal elevations and subretinal fluid with or without associated hemorrhage, closely resembling inflammatory lesions | CNV appear as subretinal elevations and subretinal fluid with or without hemorrhage, closely resembling inflammatory lesions | CNV lesions are deep with associated chorioretinal atrophy, subretinal fibrosis, and pigment clumping | CNV lesions are deep, associated with subretinal or intraretinal fluid, with hemorrhage and exudation. |
| Associated inflammatory lesions | Multifocal choroiditis present with minimal vitreous inflammation with multiple punched-out, white-yellow lesions (50–200 μm) in the peripapillary, mid-peripheral, and anteriorly to the equator | The lesions are characterized by multiple, small (50–300 μm in diameter), yellow or white, opaque, round lesions scattered throughout the posterior pole, rarely extending to mid-periphery; absence of vitritis | Active lesions appear as gray-white lesions that progress in a geographic manner in the posterior fundus | VKH presents with granulomatous anterior uveitis, posterior synechiae, iris nodules, and stromal atrophy; multiple pockets of subretinal fluid with exudative detachments; sunset glow fundus in the chronic disease. |
Summary of studies showing the efficacy of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor therapy in inflammatory choroidal neovascularization (studies with sample size ≥ 5 eyes)
| Author (year); country | Design; sample size | Disease | Mean no of injections; agent | Mean follow-up | Efficacy outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roy et al. (2017); India [ | Retrospective; 30 eyes (28 patients) | Idiopathic choroiditis, toxoplasmosis, panuveitis, VKH, serpiginous choroiditis | 2.76; (bevacizumab, ranibizumab) | 17.93 ± 14.28 months | Improvement in visual acuity in 53.3%; stabilization in 26.6% |
| Korol et al. (2017); Ukraine [ | Prospective cohort; 15 eyes (14 patients) | Toxoplasmosis | 1.7 (aflibercept) | 12 months | Visual acuity improved from 0.36 to 0.64 ( |
| Parodi et al. (2014); Italy [ | Prospective; 7 eyes (7 patients) | Serpiginous choroiditis | 1 injection in 12 months (bevacizumab) | 12 months | Visual acuity improvement in 52% and stabilization in 57% |
| Mansour et al. (2012); Lebanon [ | Retrospective; 8 eyes (8 patients) | VKH, PIC, toxoplasmosis | 1.375 (bevacizumab) | 5 years | Visual acuity improved (median gain of 3.8 lines) |
| Iannetti et al. (2013); Italy [ | Prospective study; 8 eyes (8 patients) | Posterior uveitis | 3.75 ± 1.38 (bevacizumab) | 19.25 ± 6 months | Visual acuity improved from 0.27 to 0.5 ( |
| Julian et al. (2011); France [ | Retrospective; 15 eyes (15 patients) | Multifocal choroiditis with panuveitis, ampiginous choroiditis, and others | 4.25 (in 12 eyes); 3 eyes received only 1 injection (bevacizumab) | 17.6 months | Visual acuity improved from 0.53 to 0.29 |
| Cornish et al. (2011); UK [ | Retrospective; 9 eyes (9 patients) | PIC | 2.34 injections per year (bevacizumab and ranibizumab) | 14.9 months | Visual acuity gain was 0.36 LogMAR units |
| Kramer et al. (2010); Israel [ | Retrospective; 10 eyes (10 patients) | Multifocal choroiditis, PIC, toxoplasmosis, POHS, serpiginous choroiditis, and panuveitis | 2.7 ± 2 (bevacizumab) | 13 ± 8 months | Visual acuity improved from 0.87 ± 0.74 to 0.38 ± 0.63 ( |
| Lott et al. (2009); USA [ | Retrospective; 34 eyes (30 patients) | Multifocal choroiditis, PIC, VKH, idiopathic panuveitis, sarcoidosis, serpiginous choroiditis, toxocariasis, POHS, CMV retinitis, and others | 2 (bevacizumab) | 7 months | At 6 months, visual acuity improved in 17% and stabilized in 33% |
| Doctor et al. (2009); USA [ | Retrospective; 6 eyes (5 patients) | Idiopathic panuveitis, birdshot chorioretinopathy, sympathetic ophthalmia, VKH, and multifocal choroiditis and panuveitis | 2.7 (bevacizumab) | 15.3 months | Visual acuity improved in 60% of cases |
| Fine et al. (2009); USA [ | Retrospective; 6 eyes (5 patients) | Multifocal choroiditis | 2.3 (bevacizumab) | 6 months | 5/6 eyes improved to 20/30 acuity or better at 6 months |
| Schadlu et al. (2008); USA [ | Retrospective; 28 eyes (28 patients) | POHS | 1.8 (bevacizumab) | 22.43 weeks | Visual acuity improved from 0.65 to 0.43 LogMAR units |
| Adan et al. (2007); Spain [ | Retrospective; 9 eyes of 9 patients | PIC, serpiginous choroiditis, multifocal choroiditis, POHS, and birdshot chorioretinopathy | 7 eyes received 1 injection (bevacizumab) | 7.1 months | CNV resolved completely in 100% affected eyes |
CNV choroidal neovascularization, CMV cytomegalovirus, PIC punctate inner choroidopathy, POHS presumed ocular histoplasmosis syndrome, VKH Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada’s disease
Fig. 1The detection of inflammatory choroidal neovascularization on fluorescein angiography in a patient with tubercular serpiginous-like choroiditis. Fundus photograph of the right eye shows healed choroiditis lesions in the right eye (a) and the left eye (b). Fluorescein angiography of the right eye shows early hyperfluorescent lesion in the foveal region (yellow arrowhead) (c). The late phase angiogram shows progressive hyperfluorescence of the foveal lesion suggestive of choroidal neovascularization (yellow arrowhead) with staining of the healed choroiditis lesions (d)
Fig. 2Multimodal imaging in a case of peripapillary inflammatory choroidal neovascularization (CNV) (sea fan type). a Combined fluorescein angiography (FA) and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) show multiple round hypofluorescent lesions in the mid-periphery with early ill-defined hyperfluorescence on FA and area of hypocyanescence with ill-defined choroidal vessels on ICGA temporal to the optic disc. b In the late phase FA, the mid-peripheral hypofluorescent lesions become less hypofluorescent/isofluorescent. There is a progressive increase in the hyperfluorescence temporal to the optic disc on FA, suggestive of type 2 choroidal neovascularization. c Optical coherence tomography angiography en face scan shows the presence of neovascular loops of vessels which have a sea fan configuration although the feeder vessel is not apparent (yellow dashed circle). The scan has been obtained by manually segmenting the image to obtain a slab of 60 μm thickness including the outer retina and choriocapillaris to allow better delineation of the pathology. d The corresponding structural en face scan does not show any signal loss except in the areas of hard exudates. e The optical coherence tomography line scan passing through the area of CNV shows the presence of a hyper-reflective lesion in the outer retina in the peripapillary region suggestive of type 2 CNV associated with retinal thickening and intraretinal cystoid spaces
Fig. 3Multimodal imaging of inflammatory choroidal neovascularization (CNV) (medusa head appearance) in a case of multifocal choroiditis. a The optical coherence tomography line scan passing through the fovea shows a hyper-reflective lesion in the outer retina with the presence of mild subretinal fluid suggestive of a type 2 CNV. b, c Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) en face 3 × 3 mm scan (along with structural en face OCT scan) confirms the presence of a CNV lesion with a medusa head appearance. Similar to Fig. 2, manual segmentation of the scan has been performed to obtain a slab of 60 μm thickness including the outer retina and choriocapillaris to allow better delineation of the CNV. d The OCT line scan at 8-month follow-up after one injection of intravitreal ranibizumab shows the persistence of outer retinal hyper-reflectivity but resolution of subretinal fluid. e, f At this visit, the OCTA en face scan (with corresponding structural en face scan) shows a decrease in the size of the CNV lesion along with a decrease in vessel caliber and branching