%0 Journal Article %A Janice Marie Jordan-Yu %A Kelvin Teo %A Qiao Fan %A Jose Carlos Gana %A Anna Karina Leopando %A Sandrina Nunes %A Cláudia Farinha %A Patricia Barreto %A Joana Barbosa Melo %A Isabel Carreira %A Joaquim Neto Murta %A Rufino Silva %A Chui Ming Gemmy Cheung %T T and genetic variations between Asian and Caucasian polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy %D 2021 %R 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2020-317537 %J British Journal of Ophthalmology %P 1716-1723 %V 105 %N 12 %X Purpose To compare phenotypic and genetic variations in polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV) between Caucasian and Asian patients.Methods We analysed phenotypic and genotypic data from two sites, Association for Innovation and Biomedical Research on Light and Image, Portugal and Singapore National Eye Centre, Singapore. Baseline fundus photography, spectral domain-optical coherence tomography, indocyanine green and fluorescein angiography scans were analysed by respective reading centres using a standardised grading protocol. Single nucleotide polymorphisms across 8 PCV loci were compared between cases and controls selected from each population.Results One hundred and forty treatment-naïve PCV participants (35 Portuguese and 105 Singaporean) were included. The Portuguese cohort were older (72.33±8.44 vs 68.71±9.40 years, p=0.043) and were comprised of a lower proportion of males (43% vs 71%, p=0.005) compared with the Singaporean cohort. Differences in imaging features include higher prevalence of soft drusen (66% vs 30%, p=0.004), lower prevalence of subretinal haemorrhage (14% vs 67%, p<0.001), smaller polypoidal lesion (PL) area (0.09±0.09 vs 0.76±0.93 mm2, p<0.001), lower ratio of PL to branching vascular network area (3% vs 38%, p<0.001) and lower central retinal thickness (346.48±93.74 vs 493.16±212.92 µm, p<0.001) in the Portuguese cohort. CETP rs3764261 (OR 2.467; 95% CI 1.282 to 4.745, p=0.006) in the Portuguese population was significantly associated with PCV and CFH rs800292 (OR 1.719; 95% CI 1.139 to 2.596, p=0.010) in the Singaporean population, respectively.Conclusion Among Asian and Caucasian patients with PCV, there are significant differences in the expression of phenotype. We also identified different polymorphisms associated with PCV in the two populations. %U https://bjo.bmj.com/content/bjophthalmol/105/12/1716.full.pdf