| Literature DB >> 32514410 |
Osama A Sorour1,2, Nihaal Mehta1,3, Caroline R Baumal1, Akihiro Ishibazawa1,4, Keke Liu1,5, Eleni K Konstantinou1, Sarah Martin1, Phillip Braun1,6, A Yasin Alibhai1, Malvika Arya1, Andre J Witkin1, Jay S Duker1, Nadia K Waheed1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To examine the baseline morphological characteristics and alterations in intraretinal microvascular abnormalities (IRMAs) in response to anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) treatment, documented by optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) in diabetic eyes.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-VEGF; DME; Ischemia; OCTA; PDR; Retina
Year: 2020 PMID: 32514410 PMCID: PMC7262762 DOI: 10.1186/s40662-020-00195-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye Vis (Lond) ISSN: 2326-0254
Grading scheme for IRMA morphology
| Grading score | Description |
|---|---|
4 Regression of IRMA | IRMA branches become incorporated into the surrounding capillary bed and convoluted IRMA branches assume a more normal branching pattern. This improvement may be partial (Fig. |
3 Stable IRMA | IRMA remains relatively unchanged, with the same number of branches. Vessel caliber and surrounding area of non-perfusion remain constant (Fig. |
2 Progression of IRMA | Increase in IRMA vascular branching (Fig. Associated with enlargement of the surrounding region of non-perfusion with loss of previously visualized capillary bed. |
1 Obliteration of IRMA | Disappearance of IRMA with progression of capillary non-perfusion. End-stage progression with nearly total or complete disappearance of IRMA (IRMA drop-out) (Fig. |
Fig. 1Improvement in IRMA with anti-VEGF treatment (Regressed IRMAs). The upper row demonstrates foci of IRMAs (arrows) prior to intervention and the lower row demonstrates improvement of the same IRMA foci after anti-VEGF injection. Note that IRMA branches become incorporated into the surrounding capillary bed with a decrease in convolution of vessels to form a more normal branching pattern. There is also a reduction in the surrounding adjacent area of non-perfusion. Improvement may be partial (red and green arrows) or very marked (yellow and purple arrows)
Fig. 2Worsening and stability of IRMAs after anti-VEGF treatment. The upper row demonstrates foci of IRMAs (arrows) prior to intervention and the lower row demonstrates the same IRMA foci after anti-VEGF injection. Panels (a, b, g & h) represent progression of IRMAs (yellow and green arrows). The surrounding area of non-perfusion has enlarged with loss of previously adjacent capillaries (white arrow heads). IRMAs in this category either developed more branching (green arrows) or a newly formed IRMAs appeared (yellow arrow). Panels (c, d, i & j) represent IRMA obliteration (drop-out), which is an end-stage progression of ischemia leading to massive obliteration of the vascular bed (white arrow heads), which eventually included the IRMAs itself (purple and orange arrows). Panels e, f, k & l demonstrate stable IRMAs (red and light blue arrows) where there is no change in the area of non-perfusion, IRMAs caliber, or branching
Fig. 3A graph representing difference of change in IRMAs foci between anti-VEGF-treated and control eyes. Note regressed IRMAs were only observed in the treatment group
Fig. 4Baseline morphological appearances of IRMAs. Row 1: Dilated trunk IRMA (red arrow) has increased caliber compared to the surrounding capillary bed and end blindly, with either a straight or a slightly curved shape. Row 2: Looped IRMA (green arrow) is a circular loop vascular channel originating from and draining into the same vessel. Row 3: Twisted loop or pigtail IRMA (yellow arrow) is a loop with self-rolling to resemble single or adjacent figures-of-eight with a more irregular twisting pigtail appearance. Row 4: Sea-fan shaped IRMA (blue arrow) has a branching pattern of vascular growth and the feeding and draining vessels are confined to a narrow base, forming the outline of a triangle. Row 5: Net-shaped IRMA (purple arrow) has a complex shape such that the feeding and draining vessels are not confined to a narrow base and cannot be accurately identified, and this IRMA has a rectangular or irregular outline
Fig. 5Diffrence in IRMAs changes in after anti-VEGF treatment across various baseline morphological shapes. There was no significant difference in the grading, across all parameters, pre- and post-treatment between IRMAs morphologies (all p > 0.4), suggesting no clinical prognostic significance to the different morophologies