Twelve-week dosing with Aflibercept in the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration
- PMID: 31409968
- PMCID: PMC6650619
- DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S185756
Twelve-week dosing with Aflibercept in the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration
Abstract
Purpose: To review published evidence for a treatment interval extension to ≥12-weeks in neovascular macular degeneration treated with intravitreal Aflibercept.
Methods: A systematic search was performed in the NCBI/PubMed database to identify pro- and retrospective studies retrieved by the key terms <exudative> or <neovascular> and <AMD> or <age-related macular degeneration> AND <intravitreal therapy> AND <Aflibercept> and included all papers that used a treat-and-extend (T&E) protocol including a loading phase of 3 intravitreal anti-VEGF injections and a minimal follow-up of 2 years. Disease stability was defined as the absence of any intraocular and absence or stability of subretinal fluid and pigment-epithelial detachment.
Results: Four studies were identified that reported information pertaining to disease stability or treatment extension beyond 12 weeks under intravitreal Aflibercept therapy including 1,102 eyes in total. Following a T&E protocol, a mean of 62.9% achieved disease stability and a 6.9 letter gain based on 11.9 injections over 24 months of Aflibercept treatment. As much as 43.0% of all eyes or 64.1% of the eyes with stable disease were maintained on ≥12-weekly injection intervals.
Conclusions: A consequent treatment with a null tolerance for intraretinal fluid is prerequisite to induce stability and maintain visual gain after the loading phase. Using Aflibercept in a T&E protocol, disease stability and interval extension to ≥12 weeks were reported in 43% of the eyes by end of the second year with less injections, but similar results as under fix dosing. A lower treatment burden strongly argues for an individualized proactive treatment regimen.
Keywords: AMD; Aflibercept; intravitreal anti-VEGF injections; long-term outcome; neovascular age-related macular degeneration; proactive treatment; review; treat-and-extend.
Conflict of interest statement
JGG acts as an advisor for several pharmaceutical companies (AbbVie, Alcon, Allergan, Bayer, Novartis) and contributes to several international industry-sponsored clinical studies. The underlying manuscript is independent of these activities. The author received no direct or indirect support for this study nor has he conflicting interests with the data that are presented herein. The author reports no other conflicts of interest in this work.
References
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