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Experts Opinion: OCTA vs. FFA/ICG in Uveitis – Which Will Survive?

Alessandro Invernizzi, Ester Carreño, Francesco Pichi, Marion R. Munk, Aniruddha Agarwal, Manfred Zierhut, Carlos Pavésio

2022Ocular Immunology and Inflammation25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Will optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) replace invasive imaging techniques like fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA) and indocyanine green (ICG) angiography entirely? While OCTA is being increasingly applied in the field of medical retina, will we see this change in the subspeciality of uveitis? In this article, five uveitis specialists with renowned imaging expertise answer to 10 specific questions to address this issue. The final verdict based on the comments of the experts suggests that FFA and ICG cannot be replaced by OCTA in uveitis, at least for now. While OCTA can offer new insights into the pathogenesis of certain inflammatory conditions and help in the diagnosis of complications like inflammatory choroidal neovascularisation, multimodal imaging is still the preferred approach in the assessment of patients with uveitis.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineUveitisIndocyanine green angiographyFundus fluorescein angiographyFundus (uterus)OphthalmologyIndocyanine greenFluorescein angiographyOptical coherence tomography angiographyAngiographyOptical coherence tomographyOptometryRadiologyRetinalSurgeryOcular Diseases and Behçet’s SyndromeRetinal and Optic ConditionsRetinal Diseases and Treatments
Experts Opinion: OCTA vs. FFA/ICG in Uveitis – Which Will Survive? | Litcius