Patients
Sixteen eyes of 15 patients could be included in this study. In these patients solely extrafoveal SRF could be detected on OCT prior to treatment. However, subjectively disabling visual complaints such as metamorphopsia, impaired color vision, and blurred peripheral vision led to the decision to schedule a treatment. PDT treatment had been performed between November 2014 and January 2017. Diagnosis of cCSC was established by fundoscopy, digital color fundus photography (Topcon Corp., Tokyo, Japan), fundus autofluorescence (Spectralis HRA + OCT; Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany), spectral-domain OCT (Spectralis HRA + OCT) and enhanced-depth imaging OCT of the choroid (Spectralis HRA + OCT), fluorescein angiography (FA; Spectralis HRA + OCT), and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA; Spectralis HRA + OCT). All of the following had to be present to set the cCSC diagnosis: disease duration of more than 4 months, serous SRF on OCT, ≥ one area of a ‘hot spot’ of leakage or diffuse leakage in combination with irregular RPE window defects on FA, and corresponding hyperfluorescence on ICGA. Patients in whom evidence of other diagnoses than cCSC were present, or cases with evidence of complications such as polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy and/or choroidal neovascularisation, were excluded.
Local ethics committee and institutional review board approval was obtained. The study followed the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki.
Photodynamic therapy treatment
Half-dose intravenous (3 mg/m2) verteporfin (Visudyne®; Novartis Europharm Ltd., Horsham, West Sussex, UK) was administrated over a period of 10 min. At exactly 15 min after the start of the verteporfin infusion, a contact glass (Volk® PDT lens) was positioned on the affected eye, and the laser beam was projected on the area to be treated. The zone to be treated was chosen based on hyperfluorescent areas on mid-phase (10′) ICGA, corresponding to SRF on OCT and hyperfluorescent ‘hot spots’ of leakage on mid-phase (3′) FA. For the PDT treatment, a fluency of 50 J/cm2, treatment duration of 83 s, and a laser wavelength of 689 nm (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Dublin, CA, USA) were used.
Ophthalmological examinations
Ocular complaints were recorded and Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was measured at the last visit before PDT and at least at one evaluation visit after PDT. When ETDRS BCVA was not available, a previously described conversion method was used [17]. The effect of treatment on SRF was assessed with spectral-domain OCT imaging. Moreover, the effect on intraretinal cystoid spaces without intraretinal leakage (posterior cystoid retinal degeneration) was also studied on these OCT images [18, 19].
For the treated eyes, the following findings were measured manually on enhanced-depth imaging (EDI)-OCT with use of the caliper tool in Heidelberg Eye Explorer (version 1.9.10.0; Heidelberg Engineering) at the last visit before PDT and at least at one evaluation visit after PDT: foveal CT (distance from the outer part of the hyperreflective RPE layer to the hyperreflective line of the inner surface of the sclera, on EDI-OCT) and CT at the location of the maximum height of extrafoveal SRF (distance from the outer part of the external limiting membrane to the outer part of the RPE layer). Complete resolution of SRF on OCT was considered to be the desired anatomical treatment effect. For comparison with CT in the treated eyes, subfoveal CT was also measured on EDI-OCT in untreated fellow eyes.
Statistical analysis
For statistical analyses, a dependent t test was used in SPSS Statistics (version 23; IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA) to compare both ETDRS and CT at evaluation visits with ETDRS and CT before PDT. The level of statistical significance was set at p < 0.05.