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Choroidal Microvascular Dropout in Pseudoexfoliation Glaucoma

Abstract

Purpose

To compare the prevalence of choroidal microvasculature dropout (CMvD) in pseudoexfoliation glaucoma (PXG) and disease severity-matched primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) eyes.

Methods

In a cross-sectional study, 39 eyes with PXG (33 patients) and 39 glaucoma severity-matched POAG eyes (34 patients) underwent visual fields, optical coherence tomography and optical coherence tomography angiography examination. Peripapillary vessel density (VD) was evaluated from the radial peripapillary capillary slab, parafoveal VD was measured on the superficial vascular plexus slab of the macula, and CMvD was evaluated on the choroidal slabs of the optic disc scan.

Results

The PXG and POAG groups were similar with respect to average mean deviation on visual fields (-12.1 vs. -12.0 decibel, P = 0.96) and average peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thickness on optical coherence tomography (71 vs. 74 μ, P = 0.29). Average peripapillary superficial VD (49.7% vs. 51.3%, P = 0.35) and parafoveal VD (44.8% vs. 45.8%, P = 0.33) were similar between the PXG and POAG groups. CMvD was seen in 18 PXG and 31 POAG eyes (46.2% vs. 79.5%, P = 0.002). On multivariate analysis that accounted for the severity of glaucoma, the odds of CMvD was significantly lower in the PXG group when compared with the POAG group (odds ratio: 0.18-0.21, P < 0.01).

Conclusions

The prevalence of CMvD was significantly lower in the PXG eyes when compared with the POAG eyes.

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