Long-term outcomes of anti-VEGF treatment of macular oedema due to retinal vein occlusions

Author:

Corazza Paolo1ORCID,D’Alterio Francesco Maria1ORCID,Savastano Maria Cristina23,Kabbani Jamil4ORCID,Duguid Graham1,Savastano Alfonso23,Younis Saad1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Western Eye Hospital, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, UK

2. Ophthalmic Unit, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Rome, Italy

3. Catholic University of “Sacro Cuore”, Rome, Italy

4. Imperial College London, London, UK

Abstract

Purpose retinal vein occlusion (RVO) is classified as either branch (BRVO) or central (CRVO) RVO. The gold standard treatment for macular oedema (MO) secondary to RVO is intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) injections. Our study aimed to compare ranibizumab and aflibercept outcomes over a maximum follow-up of five years. Methods this retrospective study assessed treatment-naïve RVO patients. Active disease was treated with three loading injections followed by a pro-re-nata (PRN) regimen of an anti-VEGF agent. Visual outcomes and injection frequency were analyzed, with patients stratified according to RVO subtype, anti-VEGF agent used, baseline vision, and age. Results 316 CRVO-affected eyes and 467 BRVO-affected eyes were analysed. Visual benefits between different treatments did not significantly differ, except in year 1 in ranibizumab-treated BRVO eyes. However, aflibercept-treated CRVO and BRVO eyes required significantly fewer injections during the follow up period. Furthermore, our results confirm that younger patients achieve better visual outcomes with fewer intravitreal injections. Overall, half of our patients did not require further injections after 1 year from diagnosis. Conclusion the results demonstrate that anti-VEGF treatment of RVO benefits vision for up to 5 years. Our findings are the first to suggest that compared to ranibizumab, fewer aflibercept injections may be required over five years follow up. Prospective randomised trials are needed to confirm this, alongside further attention to OCT scan features and the effect of patient demographics on treatment outcomes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Ophthalmology,General Medicine

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