Publication Date
2015
Journal Title
Ophthalmology
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the frequency, natural evolution, and histologic correlates of layered, hyperreflective, subretinal pigment epithelium (sub-RPE) lines, known as the onion sign, in neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD). DESIGN: Retrospective observational cohort study and experimental laboratory study. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred thirty eyes of 150 consecutive patients with neovascular AMD and 40 human donor eyes with histopathologic diagnosis of neovascular AMD. METHODS: Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD OCT), near-infrared reflectance (NIR), color fundus images, and medical charts were reviewed. Donor eyes underwent multimodal ex vivo imaging, including SD OCT, before processing for high-resolution histologic analysis. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Presence of layered, hyperreflective sub-RPE lines, qualitative analysis of their change in appearance over time with SD OCT, histologic correlates of these lines, and associated findings within surrounding tissues. RESULTS: Sixteen of 230 eyes of patients (7.0%) and 2 of 40 donor eyes (5.0%) with neovascular AMD had layered, hyperreflective sub-RPE lines on SD OCT imaging. These appeared as refractile, yellow-gray exudates on color imaging and as hyperreflective lesions on NIR. In all 16 patient eyes, the onion sign persisted in follow-up for up to 5 years, with fluctuations in the abundance of lines and association with intraretinal hyperreflective foci. Patients with the onion sign disproportionately were taking cholesterol-lowering medications (P=0.025). Histologic analysis of 2 donor eyes revealed that the hyperreflective lines correlated with clefts created by extraction of cholesterol crystals during tissue processing. The fluid surrounding the crystals contained lipid, yet was distinct from oily drusen. Intraretinal hyperreflective foci correlated with intraretinal RPE and lipid-filled cells of probable monocytic origin. CONCLUSIONS: Persistent and dynamic, the onion sign represents sub-RPE cholesterol crystal precipitation in an aqueous environment. The frequency of the onion sign in neovascular AMD in a referral practice and a pathology archive is 5% to 7%. Associations include use of cholesterol-lowering medication and intraretinal hyperreflective foci attributable to RPE cells and lipid-filled cells of monocyte origin.
Volume Number
122
Issue Number
11
Pages
2316-26
Document Type
Article
EPub Date
2015/08/25
Status
Northwell Researcher
Facility
Northwell Health
Primary Department
Ophthalmology
PMID
DOI
10.1016/j.ophtha.2015.07.008