Linear chorioretinal lesions as a diagnostic sign of West Nile virus infection
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Author Disclosure Block: M. Aubin: Any direct financial payments including receipt of honoraria; Name of for-profit or not-for-profit organization(s); University of Ottawa Eye Institute, Gilead. Description of relationship(s); Honoraria. Funded grants or clinical trials; Name of for-profit or not-for-profit organization(s); Gilead, PeriPharm. Description of relationship(s); Research grant. C. Bostan: None. M.T. Ibrahim: None. M. Bamberger: None. K.M. Oliver: Any direct financial payments including receipt of honoraria; Name of for-profit or not-for-profit organization(s); AbbVie. Description of relationship(s); Honoraria. Membership on advisory boards or speakers’ bureaus; Name of for-profit or not-for-profit organization(s); AbbVie. Description of relationship(s); Consultant.
Abstract Body:
Purpose: To describe the ocular clinical
features and imaging findings associated with West Nile virus (WNV) infection
and raise awareness as to their diagnostic importance in the context of the
current resurgence of human WNV cases in Canada.
Study Design: Case series.
Methods: Medical chart review of three patients (one male, two
females; 41 to 62 years old) seen in two tertiary eye care centers in Montreal,
Canada, who had confirmed WNV infection. Their ophthalmologic evaluation
included Snellen visual acuity (VA), complete slit-lamp dilated eye exam,
spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), and fundus fluorescence
angiography (FFA).
Results: The first patient experienced mild fever and generalized
malaise, for which she did not seek medical care. She presented due to
unilateral decreased visual acuity and floaters and her ophthalmic evaluation
led to the WNV diagnosis. The other two patients had been admitted to the
intensive care unit with an altered level of consciousness and fever, and were
diagnosed with meningoencephalitis. An ophthalmology consultation for these
patients was sought after serologic identification of WNV infection, which only
became available two weeks after admission. All patients presented typical
unilateral (1) or bilateral (2) multifocal placoid yellow-white chorioretinal
lesions with variable pigmentation, and linear clustering following the course
of the nerve fiber layer, consistent with WNV chorioretinitis. FFA revealed
centrally hypofluorescent round lesions with peripheral hyperfluorescence and
late staining. On SD-OCT the lesions appeared as hyper-reflective foci located
at the outer retinal and sub-retinal pigment epithelial levels.
Conclusions: The public health implications of WNV infection lend
special importance to early diagnosis. Clinical suspicion can be challenging
since systemic manifestations are not specific. Confirmatory identification of
the virus relies on serologic testing, which is associated with a significant
delay. WNV chorioretinitis is characterized by placoid multifocal linearly
distributed chorioretinal lesions. It develops in the acute phase in up to 80%
of hospitalized WNV patients and has been found to have 100% specificity for
WNV infection. Despite supporting evidence in the literature, the diagnostic
value of these chorioretinal lesions is little known by medical practitioners.
With increased awareness of this pathognomonic ophthalmic involvement in WNV,
patients will potentially benefit from early ophthalmologic assessment, earlier
access to appropriate services for their systemic disease, and appropriate
ocular treatment to reduce potentially vision-impairing complications.