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A review of optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA)
International Journal of Retina and Vitreous volume 1, Article number: 5 (2015)
Abstract
Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is a new, non-invasive imaging technique that generates volumetric angiography images in a matter of seconds. This is a nascent technology with a potential wide applicability for retinal vascular disease. At present, level 1 evidence of the technology’s clinical applications doesn’t exist. In this paper, we introduce the technology, review the available English language publications regarding OCTA, and compare it with the current angiographic gold standards, fluorescein angiography (FA) and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA). Finally we summarize its potential application to retinal vascular diseases. OCTA is quick and non-invasive, and provides volumetric data with the clinical capability of specifically localizing and delineating pathology along with the ability to show both structural and blood flow information in tandem. Its current limitations include a relatively small field of view, inability to show leakage, and proclivity for image artifact due to patient movement/blinking. Published studies hint at OCTA’s potential efficacy in the evaluation of common ophthalmologic diseases such age related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathy, artery and vein occlusions, and glaucoma. OCTA can detect changes in choroidal blood vessel flow and can elucidate the presence of choroidal neovascularization (CNV) in a variety of conditions but especially in AMD. It provides a highly detailed view of the retinal vasculature, which allows for accurate delineation of the foveal avascular zone (FAZ) in diabetic eyes and detection of subtle microvascular abnormalities in diabetic and vascular occlusive eyes. Optic disc perfusion in glaucomatous eyes is notable as well on OCTA. Further studies are needed to more definitively determine OCTA’s utility in the clinical setting and to establish if this technology may offer a non-invasive option of visualizing the retinal vasculature in detail.
Introduction
Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is a new non-invasive imaging technique that employs motion contrast imaging to high-resolution volumetric blood flow information generating angiographic images in a matter of seconds. OCTA compares the decorrelation signal (differences in the backscattered OCT signal intensity or amplitude) between sequential OCT b-scans taken at precisely the same cross-section in order to construct a map of blood flow. Axial bulk motion from patient movement is eliminated so sites of motion between repeated OCT b-scans represent strictly erythrocyte movement in retinal blood vessels [1-4].
OCTA requires higher imaging speeds than most currently available OCT systems can provide in order to obtain a densely sampled volume. Conventional OCT device scanning speeds would result in too much trade-off between decreased field of view, lower image quality, and greatly increased scanning time.
Comparing OCTA with FA and ICGA
Fluorescein angiography (FA) and indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) are both invasive test that require intravenous administration of dye and imaging up to 10–30 minutes [5-9]. They provide two-dimensional image sets that allow for dynamic visualization of blood flow with a wide field of view. Therefore, patterns of dye leakage, pooling, and staining can be appreciated and are well-documented in the literature [10]. FA remains the gold standard for the detection of choroidal neovascularization (CNV), as well as retinal neovascularization such as neovascularization of the disc (NVD) and neovascularization elsewhere (NVE) [11-13]. However, retinal pathology can be obscured by this leakage as well as hemorrhage or media opacities, and localization of the depth of the lesion and size delineation of neovascularization can be difficult due to dye leakage and poor stereopsis, and because the imaging modalities are not depth resolved. As a result, segmentation of different layers is not routinely possible with FA or ICGA. Therefore, identification of the axial location of pathology requires an understanding of patterns of blockage and leakage [10]. For example, differentiation between type 1 CNV, which is found between the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and Bruch’s membrane, and type 2 CNV, which is found in the subretinal space above the RPE, requires understanding that the RPE blocks underlying fluorescence so type 1 CNV requires a larger amount of dye to accumulate before hyperfluorescence is apparent [14].
FA and ICGA have other drawbacks that can limit their widespread use. Since they are invasive, relatively expensive, and time-consuming, they are not ideal techniques to use on a regular basis in a busy clinical setting. Although considered safe, the dyes pose risks ranging from nausea to allergic reactions, including anaphylaxis in rare instances. Aside from allergic reactions of which the likelihood increases with frequency of use, indocyanine green dye is contraindicated in pregnancy and kidney disease [15-17]. For the evaluation of patients requiring frequent follow-up exams or of those that may not tolerate injection of intravenous dye, a rapid non-invasive technique to visualize retinal and choroidal vessels would be beneficial.
OCTA in comparison is a non-invasive technique that acquires volumetric angiographic information without the use of dye. Each three-dimensional scan set takes approximately six seconds to obtain. The en-face images (OCT angiograms) can then be scrolled outward from the internal limiting membrane (ILM) to the choroid to visualize the individual vascular plexus and segment the inner retina, outer retina, choriocapillaris, or other area of interest. The en-face acquisition areas currently range from 2 × 2 mm to 12 × 12 mm with the scan quality greatly decreased with a widened field of view since the same number of OCT b-scans is used for all scanning areas. The 12 x 12 mm scan is only available on research prototypes. The 3 × 3 mm OCT angiograms appear to be higher resolution than the currently available FA/ICGA images, and a study by Matsunaga et al. deduced that they were at least equivalent in showing important vascular detail [18]. Use of the montage technique allows for a larger field of view much like FA/ICGA while maintaining this improved resolution (Figure 1; de Carlo TE et al., unpublished data in review). Carl Zeiss, Inc (Carl Zeiss Meditec, Dublin, CA) is developing an automatic wide-field montage software, which employs motion tracking to track the eyes and stitch images together.
OCTA provides flow information at a fixed point in time. Although leakage is not appreciable, exact delineation and size measurements can be performed for pathology such as CNV (de Carlo TE et al., unpublished data in review) [19]. This is especially useful for identification of type 1 CNV where localization is inferential and therefore may be inaccurate with FA/ICGA. Retinal blood flow on OCTA can be obscured by hemorrhage as this decreases the ability of light to penetrate into the deeper layers of the eye.
OCTA provides both structural and functional (i.e. blood flow) information in tandem. The “corresponding” OCT b-scans can be co-registered with the simultaneous OCT angiograms so the operator is able to scroll through the OCT angiogram like a cube scan. As a result, the precise location of pathology can be viewed on the corresponding OCT b-scans. The axial resolution of the corresponding OCT b-scans are lower quality than the typical highly-sampled line scans and are similar to the resolution of individual OCT b-scans within a volumetric cube scan. Both the retinal and the choroidal microvasculature can be visualized using OCTA while FA is used for seeing the retinal vessels and ICGA is more ideal for imaging the choroid.
Using the present technology, OCTA is more prone to artifact than FA or ICGA. The larger retinal vessels cause a “ghost image” referred to as a shadow artifact, when segmenting deeper layers, especially the outer retina. This can make it more difficult to appreciate the presence of abnormal vasculature in the deeper layers. Because OCTA uses the principle that movement in the back of the eye represents blood flow, it is prone to motion artifact. White lines (representing decorrelation signal over the entire b-scan) appear in areas of bulk patient movement such as when the patient loses fixation or moves. Conversely, blinks appear as a black line across the OCT angiogram because the OCT signal is blocked from reaching the retina and the software, therefore, detects no movement. Although erythrocytes should be the only moving object in the retina, some non-vascular structures such as fine tissue may also cause a decorrelation signal, especially if the patient is moving. For example, the edges of a retinal pigment epithelial detachment (RPED) often show up on OCTA as white noise artifact in cases of increased patient movement. It is postulated that because the RPE is a fine structure, in areas of disruption such as a RPED, it can presumably move and therefore be detected on the OCT angiogram.
On the other hand, OCTA can also miss areas of slow blood flow such as in microaneurysms or fibrotic CNV. Since OCTA relies on change between consecutive b-scans, it will detect flow only above a minimum threshold, the slowest detectable flow, which is determined by the time between the two sequential OCT b-scans. Lesions that have flow below the slowest detectable flow would therefore not be visualized using this imaging technique. Increasing the time between consecutive OCT b-scans could allow for increased flow detection but would offer a trade-off due to increased movement artifact. One of the advantages of a higher speed system is that multiple volumetric sets can be obtained at each cross-section so the threshold can be altered later by selecting different time frames between the OCT b-scans to determine the optimal image quality. Therefore if a low-flow vessel is undetectable by using the first and second OCT b-scans at a given cross section, the image may be processed using the first and third OCT b-scans to increase the time between the OCT b-scans thereby decreasing the minimum threshold.
A couple of publications have qualitatively compared OCTA with FA. Spaide et al. described the peripapillary retinal vascular layers in 12 normal eyes, finding that OCTA provided improved visualization of all the vascular layers including the radial peripapillary and deep capillary networks that were not well-distinguished on FA [3]. OCTA imaging of the perifoveal region was reported by Matsunaga et al., demonstrating that the ability to see the normal retinal vasculature was equivalent to that of FA [18].
Review
OCTA of normal eyes
The most widely available prototype OCTA system is the AngioVue software of the RTVue XR Avanti spectral-domain OCT (SD-OCT) (Optovue, Inc, Fremont, CA), which uses a split-spectrum amplitude decorrelation angiography (SSADA) algorithm. The device obtains volumetric scans of 304 × 304 A-scans at 70,000 A-scans per second in approximately 3.0 seconds. The software offers the option of 2 × 2 mm, 3 × 3 mm, 6 × 6 mm, and 8 × 8 mm OCT angiograms (Figure 2A-C) and automated segmentation of these full-thickness retinal scans into the “superficial” and “deep” inner retinal vascular plexuses, outer retina, and choriocapillaris (Figure 2E-H). The OCT angiogram segmentation of the superficial inner retina contains a projection of the vasculature in the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) and ganglion cell layer (GCL) (Figure 2E). The deep inner retina OCT angiogram segmentation shows a composite of the vascular plexuses at the border of the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and inner nuclear layer (INL) and the border of the INL and outer plexiform layer (OPL) (Figure 2F).
The OCTA prototype with the fastest acquisition rate was developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology using a swept-source OCT (SS-OCT) device (Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachussetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA). This ultra-high speed prototype employs a vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) operating at 1060 nm wavelength which allows increased light penetration into pigmented tissues and improved choroidal blood flow visualization compared to the light source used in SD-OCT. The SS-OCTA system obtains scans of 500 × 500 A-scans at 400,000 A-scans per second in approximately 3.8 seconds. This ultra-high speed allows for imaging of wider fields of view. The prototype can be manipulated to obtain OCT angiograms up to 12 × 12 mm, however, it is most commonly used to create 3 × 3 mm and 6 × 6 mm OCT angiograms of great detail (Figure 3A-B). Full-thickness scans are manually segmented into the superficial (plexus at the RNFL), intermediate (plexus at the GCL), and deep (plexuses at IPL/INL and INL/OPL borders) inner retinal vascular plexuses, outer retina, choriocapillaris, and choroidal layers (Figure 3D-F). Using this OCTA system, the choriocapillaris and choroidal vessels were described in normal eyes by Choi et al [2].
OCTA of dry (Non-Neovascular) AMD
Dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is characterized by drusen, pigmentary changes, and photoreceptor and RPE loss, called geographic atrophy (GA). Decreased foveolar choroidal blood flow is associated with AMD and increased drusen extent, and it has been hypothesized that the choroidal blood flow may predict disease progression [14]. Choi et al. (unpublished data, presented in part at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology annual meeting, May 2014, Orlando, Florida) demonstrated OCTA findings in dry AMD. Areas of impaired choriocapillaris flow typically extended beyond the borders of the GA. Eyes with dry AMD were shown to have a generalized decrease in choriocapillaris density, which was sometimes associated with drusen. Figures 4 and 5 demonstrate discrete areas of decreased signal at the choriocapillaris level below many but not all drusen in three eyes. These areas of alteration did not appear to be due to shadowing (from material in the drusen), and some choroidal vessels were appreciated below these areas. However, further studies would be necessary to determine if the choriocapillaris changes associated with the drusen are true areas of flow impairment. Choriocapillaris flow alterations are also shown in two eyes along the border of GA in Figure 6.
OCTA of wet (Neovascular) AMD
Several publications concerning OCTA of eyes with wet AMD appear in the literature. In July 2014 Jia et al. first described the ability of a prototype SS-OCTA system to visualize and quantify CNV that had been seen on FA in five eyes [19]. Then in November 2014, Moult and Choi et al. described CNV in 16 of 19 eyes with neovascularization, noting that the majority of these eyes (14/16, 88%) also demonstrated choriocapillaris alteration surrounding the CNV [20]. De Carlo et al. described qualitative and quantitative characteristics of CNV in 48 eyes [21]. The group determined sensitivity and specificity of the prototype AngioVue software, using FA as the ground truth, to be 50% (4/8) and 91% (20/22) respectively, hypothesizing that the low sensitivity was due to small sample size and blockage from large amounts of retinal hemorrhage in some patients. Figures 7 and 8 illustrate three examples of CNV, including one type 3 CNV (retinal angiomatous proliferation, RAP), on OCTA confirmed with FA/ICGA, using the Angiovue OCTA software of the RTVue XR Avanti (Optovue, Inc., Fremont, CA). Figure 9 shows two OCTA examples of CNV, one of which was treatment naïve, using the SS-OCT prototype (Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachussetts Insitute of Technology, Cambridge, MA).
OCTA of diabetes
There are few published papers as of early 2015 on OCTA of diabetic retinopathy. Choi et al. (unpublished data) demonstrated that OCTA of diabetic eyes ranging from no retinopathy to proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) demonstrated choriocapillaris abnormalities and/or retinal microvascular abnormalities such as microaneurysms, vascular remodeling adjacent to the foveal avascular zone (FAZ), enlarged FAZ, and capillary tortuosity and dilation. OCTA and FA were compared in unpublished data by Salz et al. The group supported the utility of OCTA in evaluating FAZ and the perifoveal intercapillary area, showing that they were sequentially enlarged in each stages of diabetic retinopathy (normal eyes to PDR). The data showed that OCTA visualized the majority but not all of the microaneurysms visualized by FA likely because OCTA is limited by the principle of slowest detectable flow. However, OCTA was able to appreciate some microaneurysms that were not detected by FA. OCTA also successfully detected other abnormalities that were not evident on FA such as areas of retinal non-perfusion, reduced capillary density, and increased vessel tortuosity. de Carlo et al. (unpublished data in review) described a wide-field OCTA montage of an eye with newly proliferative diabetic retinopathy. The wide-field montage OCTA image also successfully allowed visualization of an enlarged FAZ, perifoveal intercapillary area, and multiple microaneurysms. It also provided a larger field of view allowing more peripheral detection of microvascular changes, early NVE, and areas of capillary non-perfusion including areas too small to visualize on FA.
Figure 10 shows an enlarged FAZ on OCTA and compares OCTA and FA in the identification of microaneurysms in two eyes with non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR). Capillary non-perfusion and other retinal microvascular abnormalities are demonstrated in Figure 11. OCTA examples of NVD and NVE in PDR eyes are shown in Figure 12.
OCTA of artery and vein occlusion
Retinal vascular occlusions have yet to be described in the literature using OCTA as an imaging modality. However, preliminary work at the New England Eye Center of Boston, MA shows that OCTA may be useful for evaluating these diseases. Unpublished data in review by de Carlo et al. described a case of branch retinal vein occlusion (BRVO) using a wide-field montage technique. The OCTA showed a large wedge-shaped area of capillary non-perfusion in the inferotemporal macula with clear delineation of the boundary of ischemia, and vascular abnormalities such as microaneurysms, telangiectasis, and anastamoses.
Figure 13 shows OCT angiograms of an acute branch retinal artery occlusion (BRAO) and a subacute central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO). The BRAO demonstrates wedge-shaped areas of capillary non-perfusion that correlate to areas of abnormalities on the retinal thickness map. This illustrates the potential use of OCTA in pinpointing areas of ischemia and edema. The CRAO shows diffuse capillary non-perfusion in areas supplied by the central retinal artery as seen on the same-day FA. Flow is still seen in the major retinal vessels. Around the optic disc, there is an absence of blood flow in the superficial disc vasculature supplied by the central retinal artery but the lamina cribosa blood flow remains intact. As OCTA provides a snapshot in time, it does not demonstrate delayed arteriovenous transit time as FA does.
A case of BRVO and a case of central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) are illustrated in Figure 14. OCTA of the BRVO shows capillary non-perfusion superotemporally along the superior arcade extending into the FAZ, and telangiectatic vessels, capillary loops, and possible microaneurysms at the border of the ischemic areas. The OCTA of the chronic CRVO demonstrates diffuse capillary non-perfusion continuous with the FAZ and telangiectatic vessels.
OCTA of glaucoma
OCTA is a useful tool for evaluating optic disc perfusion in glaucomatous eyes. The normally dense peripapillary microvascular network is attenuated in both the superficial disc vasculature and the deeper lamina cribosa. Averaging the decorrelation signal in OCT angiograms approximates the area of microvasculature and allows the user to calculate the flow index, which is decreased in eyes with glaucoma. The flow index has been shown to have both a very high sensitivity and specificity in differentiating glaucomatous eyes from normal eyes [22,23].
Conclusions
OCTA is a new technology that has great potential for use in the clinical setting. Compared with FA and ICGA, the current retinal angiographic gold standards, OCTA advantages are that it is non-invasive, acquires volumetric scans that can be segmented to specific depths, uses motion contrast instead of intravenous dye, can be obtained within seconds, provides accurate size and localization information, visualizes both the retinal and choroidal vasculature, and shows structural and blood flow information in tandem. Disadvantages of OCTA are its limited field of view, inability to view leakage, increased potential for artifacts (blinks, movement, vessel ghosting), and inability to detect blood flow below the slowest detectable flow.
OCTA has been shown to be a useful imaging modality for the evaluation of common ophthalmologic diseases such AMD, diabetic retinopathy, artery and vein occlusions, and glaucoma. In some cases OCTA has even been shown to detect pathology not seen on FA. In the future, faster scanning speeds would be crucial to obtain larger fields of view with higher resolution. More studies are needed to determine OCTA’s utility in the clinical setting and to determine if this technology may offer a non-invasive option of visualizing the retinal vasculature in detail.
Abbreviations
- AMD:
-
Age-related macular degeneration
- BRAO:
-
Branch retinal artery occlusion
- BRVO:
-
Branch retinal vein occlusions
- CRAO:
-
Central retinal artery occlusion
- CRVO:
-
Central retinal vein occlusions
- CSCR:
-
Central serous chorioretinopathy
- CNV:
-
Choroidal neovascularization
- FA:
-
Fluorescein angiography
- FAZ:
-
Foveal avascular zone
- GCL:
-
Ganglion cell layer
- GA:
-
Geographic atrophy
- ICGA:
-
Indocyanine green angiography
- INL:
-
Inner nuclear layer
- IPL:
-
Inner plexiform layer
- ILM:
-
Internal limiting membrane
- NVE:
-
Neovascularization elsewhere
- NVD:
-
Neovascularization of the disc
- NPDR:
-
Non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy
- OCT:
-
Optical coherence tomography
- OCTA:
-
Optical coherence tomography angiography
- OPL:
-
Outer plexiform layer
- RPED:
-
Retinal pigment epithelial detachment
- PCV:
-
Polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy
- PDR:
-
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy
- RAP:
-
Retinal angiomatous proliferation
- RNFL:
-
Retinal nerve fiber layer
- RPE:
-
Retinal pigment epithelium
- SD-OCT:
-
Spectral domain optical coherence tomography
- SSADA:
-
Split-spectrum amplitude decorrelation angiography
- SS-OCT:
-
Swept source optical coherence tomography
- VCSEL:
-
Vertical cavity surface emitting laser
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Acknowledgements
The authors gratefully acknowledge Dr. James G. Fujimoto, Eric Moult, Chen Lu, Jonathan Liu, Alex Cable, and Vijaysekhar Jayaraman for developing the prototype SS-OCTA system and processing the images used in three of our figures. Additionally we gratefully acknowledge Dr. Caroline R. Baumal and Dr. Andre J. Witkin who each provided one patient case included in this review.
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Financial Support: This work was supported in part by a Research to Prevent Blindness Unrestricted grant to the New England Eye Center/Department of Ophthalmology, Tufts University School of Medicine, and the Massachusetts Lions Clubs.
Financial Disclosure: Jay S. Duker is a consultant for and receives research support from Carl Zeiss Meditech, Inc. and OptoVue, Inc.; André Romano is a consultant for and receives research support from OptoVue, Inc.
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TED drafted the article and created the figures. AR, NKW, and JSD each contributed to the conception and design of the article and critically revised the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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de Carlo, T.E., Romano, A., Waheed, N.K. et al. A review of optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA). Int J Retin Vitr 1, 5 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40942-015-0005-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40942-015-0005-8