1. PIGMENT EPITHELIAL DETACHMENT IN AGE-RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION
- Author
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Anat Loewenstein, Shai Cohen, Gilad Rabina, Hamid Hosseini, Adrian Au, Dua Masarwa, Noa Kapelushnik, Gad Heilweil, Wei Gui, Steven D. Schwartz, and Shulamit Schwartz
- Subjects
Male ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Visual acuity ,Fundus Oculi ,Snellen VA ,Visual Acuity ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Retinal Pigment Epithelium ,Macular Degeneration ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ranibizumab ,Ophthalmology ,Age related ,medicine ,Humans ,Fluorescein Angiography ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Retinal Detachment ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,Bevacizumab ,Vascular endothelial growth factor ,Pigment epithelial detachment ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Baseline characteristics ,Intravitreal Injections ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose To define injection index (II) and assess its impact on visual acuity (VA) in pigment epithelial detachment from age-related macular degeneration over 5 years. Methods Injection index is defined as the mean anti-vascular endothelial growth factor injections per year from presentation. A retrospective study of 256 eyes in 213 patients was performed. Patients were stratified by II (high: ≥9, low: Results Baseline characteristics showed no differences across II groups. Mean (range) follow-up, in years, was 5.02 (1.04-12.74) for all patients. Mean logMAR VA (Snellen VA) were 0.60 (20/80) and 0.56 (20/73) at baseline, 0.52 (20/66) and 0.59 (20/78) at Year 1, 0.45 (20/56) and 0.67 (20/94) at Year 2, 0.38 (20/48) and 0.66 (20/91) at Year 3, 0.41 (20/51) and 0.89 (20/155) at Year 4, and 0.35 (20/45) and 0.79 (20/123) at Year 5 for the high and low II groups, respectively. Linear regression analysis showed a gain of 0.5 approxETDRS letters with each additional injection per year. Conclusion Increased II was associated with better mean VA, suggesting that long-term continuous vascular endothelial growth factor suppression may improve VA in eyes thought to carry poor prognoses.
- Published
- 2021