4.7 Article

Clustering of eyes with age-related macular degeneration or pachychoroid spectrum diseases based on choroidal thickness profile

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-84650-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Korea Medical Device Development Fund - Korea government (the Ministry of Science and ICT)
  2. Korea Medical Device Development Fund - Korea government (Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy)
  3. Korea Medical Device Development Fund - Korea government (Ministry of Health Welfare)
  4. Korea Medical Device Development Fund - Korea government (Ministry of Food and Drug Safety) [9991007076, KMDF-RnD 202011B20-02]

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According to choroidal thickness profiles, eyes with AMD and PSD can be classified into different clusters, suggesting that pachydrusen may share a common pathogenesis with PSD.
Choroidal changes have been suggested to be involved in the pathophysiology of both age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and pachychoroid spectrum diseases (PSD). To find out the choroidal characteristics of each disease groups, various groups of AMD and PSD were classified into several clusters according to choroidal profiles based on subfoveal choroidal thickness (CT), peripapillary CT, the ratio of subfoveal CT to peripapillary CT and age. We retrospectively analyzed 661 eyes, including 190 normal controls and 471 with AMD or PSDs. In the AMD groups, eyes with soft drusen or reticular pseudodrusen were belonged to the same cluster as those with classic exudative AMD (all p<0.001). However, eyes with pachydrusen were not clustered with eyes from other AMD groups; instead, they were classified in the same cluster as eyes from the PSD group (all p<0.001). In the PSD group, eyes with pachychoroid neovasculopathy were grouped in the same cluster of those with polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (p<0.001). The cluster analysis based on the CT profiles, including subfoveal CT, peripapillary CT, and their ratio, revealed a clustering pattern of eyes with AMD and PSDs. These findings support the suggestion that pachydrusen has the common pathogenesis as PSD.

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