Purpose
To examine the associations of optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA)–derived retinal capillary flux with systemic determinants of health.
Methods
This is a cross-sectional study of subjects recruited from the African American Eye Disease Study. A commercially available swept-source (SS)-OCTA device was used to image the central 3 × 3 mm macular region. Retinal capillary perfusion was assessed using vessel skeleton density (VSD) and flux. Flux approximates the number of red blood cells moving through vessel segments and is a novel metric, whereas VSD is a previously validated measure commonly used to quantify capillary density. The associations of OCTA derived measures with systemic determinants of health were evaluated using multivariate generalized linear mixed-effects models.
Results
A total of 154 eyes from 83 participants were enrolled. Mean VSD and flux were 0.148 ± 0.009 and 0.156 ± 0.016, respectively. In a model containing age, systolic blood pressure, diabetes status, hematocrit, and presence of retinopathy as covariates, there was a negative correlation between VSD and age (
P
< 0.001) and retinopathy (
P
= 0.02), but not with hematocrit (
P
= 0.85) or other factors. There was a positive correlation between flux and hematocrit (
P
= 0.02), as well as a negative correlation for flux with age (
P
< 0.001), systolic blood pressure (
P
= 0.04), and diabetes status (
P
= 0.02). A 1% decrease in hematocrit was associated with the same magnitude change in flux as ∼1.24 years of aging. Signal strength was associated with flux (
P
< 0.001), but not VSD (
P
= 0.51).
Conclusions
SS-OCTA derived flux provides additional information about retinal perfusion distinct from that obtained with skeleton density-based measures. Flux is appropriate for detecting subclinical changes in perfusion in the absence of clinical retinopathy.