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Choroidal manifestations of non-ocular sarcoidosis: an enhanced depth imaging OCT study.
BMC Ophthalmology 2024 April 27
BACKGROUND: Although choroidal thickening was reported as a sign of active inflammation in ocular sarcoidosis, there has been no research on the choroidal changes in non-ocular sarcoidosis (defined as systemic sarcoidosis without overt clinical signs of ocular involvement). Therefore, this study aimed to investigate choroidal structural changes in patients with non-ocular sarcoidosis.
METHODS: This retrospective case-control study was conducted at Asan Medical Center, a tertiary referral center. We evaluated 30 eyes with non-ocular sarcoidosis and their age- and spherical equivalent-matched healthy control eyes. The subfoveal choroidal thickness, area ratio (Sattler layer-choriocapillaris complex [SLCC] area to Haller layer [HL] area), and choroidal vascularity index (CVI, luminal area to choroidal area) were analyzed using enhanced depth imaging in optical coherence tomography. Systemic and ocular factors associated with the choroidal thickness were investigated.
RESULTS: Compared with the healthy control group, the non-ocular sarcoidosis group had significantly thicker subfoveal choroid (total and all sublayers [SLCC and HL]) and lower area ratio. There were no significant differences in the CVIs at all sublayers between groups. In the non-ocular sarcoidosis group, eyes under oral steroid treatment had thinner choroid than eyes under observation. In the control group, eyes with older age and more myopic spherical equivalent had thinner choroidal thickness.
CONCLUSION: Total and all sublayers of the subfoveal choroid were significantly thicker without significant vascularity changes in non-ocular sarcoidosis eyes than in healthy control eyes. The degree of choroidal thickening was disproportionally greater at HL than at SLCC. These characteristic choroidal changes may be the subclinical manifestations in non-ocular sarcoidosis.
METHODS: This retrospective case-control study was conducted at Asan Medical Center, a tertiary referral center. We evaluated 30 eyes with non-ocular sarcoidosis and their age- and spherical equivalent-matched healthy control eyes. The subfoveal choroidal thickness, area ratio (Sattler layer-choriocapillaris complex [SLCC] area to Haller layer [HL] area), and choroidal vascularity index (CVI, luminal area to choroidal area) were analyzed using enhanced depth imaging in optical coherence tomography. Systemic and ocular factors associated with the choroidal thickness were investigated.
RESULTS: Compared with the healthy control group, the non-ocular sarcoidosis group had significantly thicker subfoveal choroid (total and all sublayers [SLCC and HL]) and lower area ratio. There were no significant differences in the CVIs at all sublayers between groups. In the non-ocular sarcoidosis group, eyes under oral steroid treatment had thinner choroid than eyes under observation. In the control group, eyes with older age and more myopic spherical equivalent had thinner choroidal thickness.
CONCLUSION: Total and all sublayers of the subfoveal choroid were significantly thicker without significant vascularity changes in non-ocular sarcoidosis eyes than in healthy control eyes. The degree of choroidal thickening was disproportionally greater at HL than at SLCC. These characteristic choroidal changes may be the subclinical manifestations in non-ocular sarcoidosis.
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