Purpose: To characterize etiologies and clinical–imaging features of peripapillary choroidal neovascularization (CNV) and identify predictors of underlying disease (i.e., including age-related macular degeneration AMD vs. non-AMD etiologies) and visual outcomes. Methods: This multicenter retrospective case series included 156 eyes of 138 treatment-naïve patients with peripapillary CNV from 12 tertiary centers. Peripapillary CNV was defined as sub-RPE or subretinal neovascularization within one disc diameter of the optic disc. Multimodal imaging (optical coherence tomography OCT, fluorescein and indocyanine green angiography, and/or OCT angiography) was used to confirm CNV and etiology. Baseline OCT features included CNV type, exudation pattern, foveal involvement, peripapillary location, and distance to the disc. Longitudinal OCT and best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA, logMAR) were analyzed when available. Management followed routine clinical practice with variable administration of anti-VEGF therapy. Regression models and a conditional inference tree assessed predictors of diagnosis and visual outcome. Results: The most common etiologies were AMD (51.9%), pachychoroid disease (27.6%), and angioid streaks (6.4%). CNV most frequently involved the temporal peripapillary quadrant (84.6%). Aneurysmal type 1 CNV predominated in pachychoroid disease, whereas type 2 CNV was more common in other etiologies. Baseline BCVA was worse in AMD and angioid streaks and was independently associated with underlying disease and foveal involvement. The Conditional Inference Tree associated age >71 years and nonaneurysmal type 1 or type 2 CNV with AMD. Conclusions: Peripapillary CNV most commonly arises from AMD and pachychoroid disease. Simple clinical and imaging features can assist etiological classification and visual prognostication in clinical practice.
Vallino et al. (Thu,) studied this question.