HYBRID EVENT: You can participate in person at London, UK or Virtually from your home or work.

6th Edition of Global Conference on Surgery and Anaesthesia

September 15-17, 2025 | Hybrid Event

September 15 -17, 2025 | London, UK
GCSA 2025

Coats disease in adulthood with preserved vision after intravitreal aflibercept injection combined with laser photocoagulation: A case report

Safaa Jamal Abdullah Abtli, Speaker at Surgery Conferences
Najah National University, State of Palestine
Title : Coats disease in adulthood with preserved vision after intravitreal aflibercept injection combined with laser photocoagulation: A case report

Abstract:

Background: This case report describes a rare case of Coats disease in adult female patient with preserved vision after intravitreal Aflibercept injection and laser photocoagulation.

Case presentation: A female patient of Asian Palestinian descent, aged 20, exhibited a progressive and painless deterioration in the vision of her left eye over a period of two weeks. She exhibited no additional ocular symptoms. Prior to her presentation, she had no notable medical history and her vision was normal in both eyes. Inferotemporal telangiectasia, sausage-like blood vessels with perivascular sheathing in the peripheral fundus, extensive exudate involving the macula, severe macular edema, and localized inferotemporal exudative retinal detachment were observed upon examination of the posterior segment of her left eye. Following this, optical coherence tomography (OCT) identified subretinal exudate, intraretinal and subretinal fluid. After establishing the diagnosis of stage 3 Coats’ disease, the patient was treated with intravitreal Aflibercept (Eylea) injections and sectoral laser photocagulation. The third injection resulted in the absence of intraretinal and subretinal fluid by OCT, but the subretinal exudate remained unresolved. One month subsequent to the previous injection, FFA guided sectoral laser photoagulation was applied to the inferiotemporal ischemic area. The patient was subsequently monitored monthly, and her vision improved. Five months after treatment, her vision has improved to 0.7 (6/8.7) and she has remained stable ever since. At present, the patient is undergoing routine outpatient follow-up.

Conclusion: Coats disease is an idiopathic, progressive disease that mostly affects male infants, yet adult cases have been documented. Our case and the existing body of literature indicate that adult individuals have a favorable visual prognosis in the small proportion of cases where this occurs. It appeared that the implementation of intravitreal therapies and increased use of lasers led to enhanced visual outcomes. It is recommended to perform lifelong follow-up to monitor for recurrences and complications.

Biography:

Safaa studied medicine at An-Najah National University, Palestine and graduated as a doctor in 2022. She then completed her internship in 2023 at the Ministry of Health Hospitals in Palestine. She then started working as a research and teaching assistant at the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at An-Najah National University until today. Early 2025 she started working as a general practitioner at Nablus Specialized Hospital, Palestine. She is GMC-registered with license to practice in the UK and preparing for ST1 training in the UK.
 

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