Purpose: To evaluate findings in eyes with polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy on indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) and optical coherence tomography (OCT) over 3 months after ranibizumab treatment.
Method: Fifty-one eyes from 51 patients with treatment-naive polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy received intravitreal ranibizumab injections. We evaluated changes in polypoidal lesions on ICGA and OCT and their correlation over 3 months. Ranibizumab was injected again based on the presence of residual fluid on OCT.
Results: Indocyanine green angiography detected 75 polypoidal lesions. All corresponding OCT lesions showed baseline protrusion of the retinal pigment epithelium. At 3 months, 26 lesions (35%) resolved on ICGA: retinal pigment epithelium protrusion on OCT resolved in 10 lesions (38%), 10 lesions (38%) decreased in height, and 6 lesions (24%) remained unchanged. Forty-nine lesions persisted on ICGA, retinal pigment epithelium protrusion resolved in 2 lesions (4%), decreased in 4 lesions (8%), were stable in 36 lesions (73%), and increased in 7 lesions (15%). Three lesions newly developed. Six eyes (12%) had resolved lesions, and 33 eyes (67%) had persistent lesions on ICGA and OCT. Residual exudative changes were associated with persistent lesions on OCT.
Conclusion: Indocyanine green angiography and OCT baseline findings of polypoidal lesions in polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy were well correlated; however, a discrepancy was seen during treatment. Polypoidal lesions persisted more often on OCT, although ICGA and OCT showed the efficacy of ranibizumab for some polypoidal lesions.