Development of typical age-related macular degeneration and polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy in fellow eyes of Japanese patients with exudative age-related macular degeneration. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: To investigate the development of typical age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV) in fellow eyes of Japanese patients with exudative AMD. DESIGN: Retrospective observational consecutive case series. METHODS: Two hundred and sixteen Japanese patients were enrolled in this study from the outpatient clinic of the University of Tokyo Hospital. Ninety-one patients had typical AMD and one hundred and twenty-five patients had PCV. The average follow-up period was 33.6 and 25.1 months for typical AMD and PCV patients. RESULTS: The cumulative incidence of involvement in fellow eyes with overall exudative AMD, including both typical AMD and PCV, was 3.4% in one year, 9.3% in three years, and 11.3% in five years. It was 3.6%, 7.3%, and 11.2% in typical AMD, and 3.2%, 11.1%, and 11.1% in PCV in one, three, and five years, respectively. Before the development of exudative AMD, patients with typical AMD had a variety of funduscopic findings including retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) atrophy, drusen, drusenoid pigment epithelial detachments (PED), and normal macula. PCV patients, on the other hand, had funduscopic findings of RPE atrophy. Inner choroidal vascular abnormality of vascular network and polypoidal formation was observed in several eyes before the clinical manifestation of exudative changes. CONCLUSIONS: Typical AMD and PCV had similar probabilities of involving the fellow eye in unilaterally affected Japanese patients. RPE atrophy was a prevailing finding in fellow eyes of patients who developed PCV. In PCV, choroidal vascular network and polypoidal formation gradually grow before exudative changes.

publication date

  • April 24, 2008

Research

keywords

  • Choroid
  • Macular Degeneration
  • Peripheral Vascular Diseases

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 45449096073

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.ajo.2008.03.002

PubMed ID

  • 18439567

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 146

issue

  • 1