Purpose: One-fourth of the patients with exudative age-related macular degeneration (AMD) treated with an autologous retinal pigment epithelium (RPE)-choroid translocation had a hyperfluorescent optic disc with indocyanine green angiography (ICGA). This study aimed to identify whether indocyanine green (ICG)-assisted surgery was related to the hyperfluorescence of the optic disc with ICGA.
Methods: Retrospective observational case series of 31 AMD patients treated with an RPE-choroid translocation and who had ICGA after surgery. The ICGAs were assessed for hypo/iso/hyperfluorescence of the optic disc and fluorescence was related to the time interval between ICGA and the possible use of intravitreal ICG.
Results: The optic disc was hyperfluorescent in six patients, isofluorescent in one, and hypofluorescent in 24 patients. All hyperfluorescent optic discs and 7 of the 24 hypofluorescent optic discs were preceded with ICG-assisted surgery with a time interval of 7+/-3 weeks and 43+/-12 weeks, respectively (P=0.001, Student t-test). The other 17 hypofluorescent discs were not preceded by ICG-assisted surgery and the one isofluorescent optic disc was observed 32 weeks after ICG-assisted surgery.
Conclusion: There was a statistically significant correlation between intravitreal ICG use during surgery and a hyperfluorescent optic disc with ICGA in our patient group.