Optic nerve head microcirculation on optical coherence tomography angiography is reduced in systemic lupus erythematosus and relates to nailfold videocapillaroscopy phenotypes: a cross-sectional case–control study
摘要
To quantify ocular microcirculation by optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) and peripheral microcirculation by nailfold videocapillaroscopy (NVC) in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), to compare OCTA/optical coherence tomography (OCT) metrics with healthy controls, and to explore NVC–ocular relationships.
MethodsIn this single-center, cross-sectional case–control study, 32 SLE patients and 34 controls were evaluated at one visit. NVC was scored semi-quantitatively (EULAR-standardized) in SLE. OCTA provided macular superficial/deep plexus and optic nerve head/peripapillary radial peripapillary capillary (RPC) vessel density metrics; structural OCT measured peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness. Multiple testing was controlled with Benjamini–Hochberg false discovery rate (FDR). Exploratory ROC analysis and age/BMI-adjusted logistic regression were performed for inside-disc RPC vessel density (RPCID).
ResultsRPCID was lower in SLE than controls (50.6 [43.4–55.7] vs 55.3 [44.3–59.7]; FDR-adjusted p < 0.001) and showed good in-sample discrimination (AUC = 0.804). Higher RPCID was associated with lower odds of SLE after adjustment (OR = 0.737; 95% CI 0.625–0.869; p < 0.001). Within SLE, higher NVC dilation scores correlated with lower macular vessel density (deep superior sector: r = − 0.384; FDR p = 0.041), and higher composite NVC morphology correlated with greater mean RNFL thickness (r = 0.505; FDR p < 0.05).
ConclusionsOptic nerve head/peripapillary microcirculation is reduced in SLE, and RPCID showed the largest between-group difference and promising in-sample discrimination of case–control status. NVC–ocular associations are exploratory and warrant longitudinal, multicenter validation.