Retrospective case series.
One hundred and one eyes of 75 patients with uveitic ME, as imaged by SD-OCT, were identified at a single tertiary-care referral center. The main outcome measures were best-corrected visual acuity, central subfield thickness (CSFT), and rates of macular edema improvement (¡Ý20 % reduction in CSFT), and resolution (defined as reduction of CSFT to <315 ¦Ìm) of ME at 3 and 6 months follow-up.
Forty eyes of 29 patients had SRF on SD-OCT at presentation, which was associated with greater macular thickness (mean CSFT 488 ¦Ìm vs 362 ¦Ìm, P = .0001) and worse visual acuity than ME without SRF (20/115 vs 20/51, P = .015). However, eyes with SRF responded more favorably to treatment, and at 3 and 6 months of follow-up they achieved greater rates of improvement and resolution of ME than eyes without SRF (77 % improved and 50 % resolved at 6 months, vs 20 % and 13 % , respectively; P = .003 and P = .017, respectively) and recovered to a similar level of visual acuity (20/62 vs 20/42 at 6 months, P = .54).
SRF in uveitic ME is associated with thicker retinas and worse visual acuity on presentation but responds more favorably to treatment and displays greater rates of edema resolution and visual acuity improvement.