ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To report a case of exudative perifoveal exudative vascular anomalous complex (ePVAC) in a Brazilian healthy patient that underwent a complete resolution after aflibercept intravitreal injections. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 41-year-old healthy Brazilian man complained of acute central vision loss in his right eye (RE). Fundus examination showed a perifoveal hemorrhagic aneurysmal lesion, accompanied by several hard exudates in RE. On fluorescein angiography, these abnormalities showed a progressive hyperfluorescence with surrounding leakage. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) revealed a deep, perifoveal hyporeflective cystic space with a hyperreflective wall and hyperreflective material inside of fibrin-like aspect. Around this aneurism, intraretinal hyporeflective spaces suggestive of exudation were detected. Nor pathological flow signal, or telangiectatic dilations were evidenced on OCT-angiography. Therefore, a diagnosis of exudative ePVAC in RE was hypothesized. After an initial observation, the patient underwent three monthly aflibercept intravitreal injections (0.05â ml/2â mg), with a significative anatomical and functional improvement after two weeks from first dose. On last follow-up at five months from baseline, patient experienced no evidence of new exudation and a stable visual acuity. DISCUSSION: Placental growth factor (PlGF) may impact on pericytes' dropout, and thus on ePVAC development. In contrast to the other anti-VEGF drugs, aflibercept is the only molecule contrasting PlGF. Therefore, aflibercept would act on ePVAC not as an anti-VEGF drug, but rather as an anti-PlGF one. CONCLUSION: This report encouraged the use of aflibercept as a therapeutic option for ePVAC. Further studies are required to confirm our result and the impact of PlGF on ePVAC pathogenesis.