Author: Williams PJ, Gregory A, Komro J, You Q, Ross B, Colon C, Juzych MS, Hughes BA, Ridha F.
Geographical coverage: Not reported
Sector: Treatment
Sub-sector: imaging technique
Equity focus: Not explicitly stated
Study population: Manuscripts involving intraocular pressure (IOP) change and concurrent optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA).
Review type: Effectiveness review
Quantitative synthesis method: Narrative synthesis
Qualitative synthesis method: Not applicable
Background
Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is a noninvasive technique visualising retinal and optic nerve vasculature by tracking red blood cell movement. Introduced commercially in 2014, OCTA has improved diagnostic accuracy for retinal diseases and glaucoma, providing an alternative to fluorescein angiography. OCTA offers quantifiable capillary density metrics essential for assessing vascular changes in ocular pathologies. However, intraocular pressure (IOP) fluctuations can affect OCTA readings and its diagnostic reliability, potentially causing misinterpretations of disease progression. While clinically adopted, there is limited consensus on IOP variability’s precise impact on OCTA metrics.
Objectives
To present current evidence relating to the effect of IOP on OCTA metrics to aggregate information and guide future studies.
Main findings
Authors found that intraocular pressure (IOP) changes can affect superficial vascular plexus vessel density (VD) measurements on OCTA, particularly when IOP rises above the physiological norm. The review encompassed 45 studies categorized into six groups based on primary intervention:
Overall, IOP changes exceeding the physiological range significantly affected superficial VD measurements, while diurnal variations did not. Cataract surgery primarily improved OCTA metrics through enhanced image quality. The review underscores the necessity for standardized OCTA data acquisition and reporting to advance future research.
Methodology
The studies published from January 1, 2015 to August 27, 2022, and reporting OCTA scans of either the optic disc or macula and a change in IOP with corresponding OCTA scans before and after the IOP change were included on the review. All languages were included and translated. Authors searched in PubMed/Medline, Cochrane, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases. Reference lists of the identified studies were scanned to find additional relevant publications. Two reviewers independently screened the potentially relevant articles against the eligibility criteria. Data collected included sample size, IOP changes, OCTA metrics (e.g., vessel density), and image quality metrics (e.g., signal strength). Statistical analysis was deferred due to inconsistencies in data reporting.
Applicability/external validity
The review did not discuss the applicability or external validity of its findings. Although it summarized the impact of IOP changes on OCTA metrics across various interventions, it lacked an evaluation of how generalisable these findings are to broader populations or clinical settings. The review noted limitations such as variability in imaging techniques, small sample sizes, and inconsistent reporting, but did not assess their impact on real-world clinical practice.
Geographic focus
Geographic location of included studies was not reported by the authors.
Summary of quality assessment
Overall, there is low confidence in the conclusions about the effects of this study due to important methodological concerns. The review authors did not contact experts during their search. They also didn’t specify their data extraction method or assess study quality.
Publication Source:
Williams PJ, Gregory A, Komro J, You Q, Ross B, Colon C. The impact of intraocular pressure on optical coherence tomography angiography: A review of current evidence. Saudi J Ophthalmol. 2024 Jan 3;38(2):144-151.
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