4.7 Article

Nailfold Microvascular Imaging by Dynamic Optical Coherence Tomography in Systemic Sclerosis: A Case-Controlled Pilot Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
Volume 142, Issue 4, Pages 1050-1057

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jid.2021.08.436

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Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre
  2. Cheney Translational Skin Science Facility

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This study aimed to determine whether dynamic-optical coherence tomography (D-OCT) can provide information on microvasculopathy in patients with systemic sclerosis compared to the current gold standard, nailfold video-capillaroscopy (NVC). In conclusion, D-OCT provided qualitative and quantitative information on nailfold microvasculopathy, showing a correlation between microvascular flow density and NVC scores. The development of D-OCT as a standardized imaging technique could provide a quantitative outcome measure in clinical trials and practice.
In systemic sclerosis, outcome measures of skin microvasculopathy are needed for both clinical trials and practice. The aim of this study was to determine whether dynamic-optical coherence tomography (D-OCT) is able to provide information on microvasculopathy compared with the current gold standard, nailfold video-capillaroscopy (NVC), in patients with systemic sclerosis. This case-controlled study included (i) 40 patients with systemic sclerosis, classified by NVC pattern in four age- and sex-matched groups (normal/nonspecific, early, active, late); (ii) a fifth group of 10 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. All participants underwent NVC and D-OCT. D-OCT images were compared with the corresponding NVC images. Reliability was assessed. D-OCT images visualized the corresponding NVC patterns. D-OCT microvascular flow density was different across the five NVC pattern groups (P = 0.0114) with a significant trend test (P = 0.0006). Microvascular flow density correlated with the NVC semiquantitative score (r = -0.7, P < 0.0001), number of abnormal shapes/mm (r = .0.3, P = 0.0264), and number of capillaries/mm (r = 0.6, P < 0.0001). Reliability was excellent (intraclass correlation coefficient > 0.9). In conclusion, in patients with systemic sclerosis, D-OCT provided qualitative and quantitative information on nailfold microvasculopathy, showing a correlation between microvascular flow density and NVC scores. The development of D-OCT as a standardized imaging technique could provide a quantitative outcome measure in clinical trials and practice.

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