When a patient attends with a suspected “eye freckle,” the first priority is to map the lesion accurately and document a baseline that can be compared later. The exact tests depend on location. ¹
For suspected choroidal lesions, baseline assessment typically includes:
- Dilated examination and colour fundus photography (size and position)
- Optical coherence tomography (OCT) to detect subretinal fluid or retinal disruption ²
- Ultrasound where thickness and internal reflectivity need objective measurement
- Autofluorescence when lipofuscin/orange pigment assessment is clinically relevant ³
For iris and conjunctival pigment, slit-lamp photography is essential because subtle enlargement or vascular change can be difficult to judge from memory alone. ²
The clinical advantage of this approach is that risk is determined by objective features, not impression. Imaging also allows a clear written plan: whether the lesion is low-risk and suitable for surveillance, or whether risk features meet criteria for early ocular oncology input. ¹
References
- Pearce E, Simpson ARH, Keane PA, Sagoo MS, Damato B, Heimann H. Survey of ophthalmic imaging use to assess risk of progression of choroidal nevus to melanoma in the United Kingdom. Ophthalmology Retina. 2023;7(5):401-409. doi:10.1016/j.oret.2022.12.010. PMID: 36549472.
- Shields CL, Materin MA, Mashayekhi A, Shields JA. Optical coherence tomography of choroidal nevus in 120 patients. Retina. 2005;25(3):243-252. doi:10.1097/00006982-200504000-00001. PMID: 15805899.
- Dalvin LA, Shields CL, Lally SE, Huang X, Ancona-Lezama D, Williams BK Jr, et al. Combination of multimodal imaging features predictive of choroidal nevus transformation into melanoma. British Journal of Ophthalmology. 2019;103(10):1441-1447. doi:10.1136/bjophthalmol-2018-312967. PMID: 30523045.
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