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  • Title: Functional clinical endpoints and their correlations in eyes with AMD with and without subretinal drusenoid deposits-a pilot study.
    Author: Grewal MK, Chandra S, Gurudas S, Rasheed R, Sen P, Menon D, Bird A, Jeffery G, Sivaprasad S.
    Journal: Eye (Lond); 2022 Feb; 36(2):398-406. PubMed ID: 33750892.
    Abstract:
    PURPOSE: To evaluate functional clinical endpoints and their structural correlations in AMD, with a focus on subretinal drusenoid deposits (SDD). METHODS: This prospective study enroled 50 participants (11 controls, 17 intermediate AMD (iAMD) with no SDD, 11 iAMD with SDD and 11 non-foveal atrophic AMD). Participants underwent best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), low luminance visual acuity (LLVA), low luminance questionnaire (LLQ), scotopic thresholds, rod-intercept time (RIT), photopic flicker electroretinograms and multimodal imaging. Functional and structural relationships were assessed. RESULTS: Compared with healthy participants, BCVA, LLVA, scotopic thresholds were depressed, and RIT prolonged in iAMD patients with SDD (p = 0.028, p = 0.045, p = 0.014 and p < 0.0001 respectively). Patients with SDD also had reduced scotopic function and delayed RIT compared to iAMD without SDD (p = 0.005 and p < 0.0001). Eyes with SDD and non-foveal atrophy did not differ functionally. Nor did healthy subjects compared with iAMD without SDD. Functional parameters were significantly associated with scotopic thresholds (r = 0.39-0.64). BCVA, LLVA and scotopic thresholds correlated well with ONL volume, ONL thickness and choroidal thickness (r = 0.34-0.61). CONCLUSION: Eyes with SDD are surrogate markers of photoreceptor abnormalities comparable with non-central atrophy and should be sub-analysed in clinical trials evaluating potential prophylactic agents to decrease the progression of AMD and may even require different therapeutic interventions.
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