Abstract:
Purpose: To evaluate the impact of lens opacity on the reliability of optical coherence tomog- raphy angiography metrics and to find a vessel caliber threshold that is reproducible in cataract patients.Methods: A prospective cohort study of 31 patients, examining one eye per patient, by applying 33mm macular optical coherence tomography angiography before (18.94±12.22days) and 3 months (111 ± 23.45 days) after uncomplicated cataract surgery. We extracted superficial (SVC) and deep vascular plexuses (DVC) for further analysis and evaluated changes in image contrast, vessel metrics (perfusion density, flow deficit and vessel-diameter index) and foveal avascular area (FAZ). Results: After surgery, the blood flow signal in smaller capillaries was enhanced as image contrast improved. Signal strength correlated to average lens density defined by objective measurement in Scheimpflug images (Pearson’s r: –.40, p: .027) and to flow deficit (r1⁄4 –.70, p<.001). Perfusion density correlated to the signal strength index (r1⁄4.70, p<.001). Vessel metrics and FAZ area, except for FAZ area in DVC, were significantly different after cataract surgery, but the mean change was approximately 3–6%. A stepwise approach in extracting vessels according to their pixel caliber showed a threshold of > 6 pixels caliber ($20–30 mm) was comparable before and after lens removal.Conclusion: In patients with cataract, OCTA vessel metrics should be interpreted with caution. In addition to signal strength, contrast and pixel properties can serve as supplementary quality met- rics to improve the interpretation of OCTA metrics. Vessels with $20–30 mm in caliber seem to be reproducible.