Patchy hyperautofluorescence as a predictive factor for the recurrence of punctate inner choroidopathy.

2021 
Abstract Purpose To investigate baseline clinical and imaging factors that may correlate with risk of recurrence of punctate inner choroidopathy (PIC). Methods In this retrospective observational study, charts and multimodal imaging of forty-five patients diagnosed with PIC during the active inflammatory phase were reviewed. MMI examinations, including fundus photography, shortwave fundus autofluorescence(SW-FAF), fluorescein angiography(FFA), indocyanine green angiography(ICGA), and spectral domain optical coherence tomography(SD−OCT_), were conducted to diagnose PIC, and MMI parameters at baseline were assessed as potential biomarkers indicating the recurrence of inflammation. Statistical analysis was performed to determine the clinical and imaging factors associated with recurrence of PIC. Results Among the 45 recruited patients, 18 (40 %) had at least one episode of recurrence during a mean follow-up period of 23.66 ± 12.65 months (range, 12–50 months). Best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) at the final visit during the follow-up was significantly different between the recurrence and nonrecurrence groups. Patchy hyperautofluorescence at baseline appeared in 77.78 % of the patients with recurrence, and the incidence of patchy hyperautofluorescence was significantly different between the patients with recurrence and those without recurrence (P<0.001). Conclusions Recurrence is not rare among PIC patients and leads to a worse visual acuity outcome. Patchy hyperautofluorescence at baseline is a risk factor for recurrence of PIC. Patchy hyperautofluorescent areas in PIC patients may indicate a need for close follow-up even though PIC-related inflammation regresses.
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