Combining retinal and choroidal microvascular metrics improves discriminative power for diabetic retinopathy

Author:

Tan BingyaoORCID,Lim Nicole-Ann,Tan Rose,Gan Alfred Tau Liang,Chua JacquelineORCID,Nusinovici SimonORCID,Cheung Chui Ming GemmyORCID,Chakravarthy Usha,Wong Tien YinORCID,Schmetterer LeopoldORCID,Tan Gavin

Abstract

PurposeTo use optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) parameters from both the retinal and choroidal microvasculature to detect the presence and severity of diabetic retinopathy (DR).MethodThis is a cross-sectional case–control study. OCTA parameters from retinal vasculature, fovea avascular zone (FAZ) and choriocapillaris were evaluated from 3×3 mm2 fovea-centred scans. Areas under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve were used to compare the discriminative power on the presence of diabetes mellitus (DM), the presence of DR and need for referral: group 1 (no DM vs DM no DR), group 2 (no DR vs any DR) and group 3 (non-proliferative DR (NPDR) vs proliferative DR (PDR)).Results35 eyes from 27 participants with no DM and 132 eyes from 75 with DM were included. DR severity was classified into three groups: no DR group (62 eyes), NPDR (51 eyes), PDR (19 eyes). All retinal vascular parameters, FAZ parameters and choriocapillaris parameters were strongly altered with DR stages (p<0.01), except for the deep plexus FAZ area (p=0.619). Choriocapillaris parameters allowed to better discriminate between no DM versus DM no DR group compared with retinal parameters (areas under the ROC curve=0.954 vs 0.821, p=0.006). A classification model including retinal and choroidal microvasculature significantly improved the discrimination between DR and no DR compared with each parameter separately (p=0.029).ConclusionsEvaluating OCTA parameters from both the retinal and choroidal microvasculature in 3×3 mm scans improves the discrimination of DM and early DR.

Funder

SERI-Lee Foundation

Duke-NUS Medical School

Singapore Eye Research Institute & Nanyang Technological University

National Research Foundation Singapore

Agency for Science, Technology and Research

National Medical Research Council

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Sensory Systems,Ophthalmology

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