Purpose
To determine whether photodynamic therapy (PDT) has a vaso-occlusive effect on the branching vascular network in polypoidal
choroidal vasculopathy (PCV) and whether PDT can prevent future recurrence.
Methods
We analyzed pre-and post-PDT indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) results of 27 patients (27 eyes) who were diagnosed with
PCV and who had shown clinical improvement accompanied by occlusion of polypoidal lesions after PDT. We also investigated
the recurrent events in these patients and the origin of the recurrences.
Results
The branching vascular network persisted, at least in part, in 20 (87%) of 23 eyes undergoing one PDT session and in two (50%)
of four eyes undergoing two PDT sessions. In the remaining five eyes, we could not determine definitively whether the branching
vessels were occluded completely. Recurrent serous changes occurred in nine eyes (33%) 14–48 months after the last PDT. ICGA
revealed that these changes were caused by new polypoidal lesions that originated from further-grown branches of the persistent
branching vascular network. Diffuse leakage from undetermined sources seemed to coexist in two eyes.
Conclusions
PDT cannot induce complete occlusion of the branching vascular network. PDT does not prevent future recurrence, because new
active polypoidal lesions may develop from the persistent branching vessels in the network.
Key Words branching vascular network - photodynamic therapy - polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy - recurrence - vaso-occlusion