Durability of every-8-week aflibercept maintenance therapy in treatment-experienced neovascular age-related macular degeneration

Abstract

PurposeTo determine the proportion of treatment-experienced eyes with exudative age-related macular degeneration successfully treated with every-4-week aflibercept that can be kept dry on fixed every-8-week aflibercept injections (maintenance).MethodsIn this retrospective chart review, we evaluated our cohort of patients treated with a treatment paradigm for CNV in AMD. Initially, patients were treated with bevacizumab or ranibizumab and switched to every-4-week aflibercept when therapeutic responses were not durable or were suboptimal. Maintenance every-8-week therapy was initiated when the retina was completely dry on every-4-week aflibercept therapy. The primary outcome measure was recurrence of exudation on optical coherence tomography (OCT) during maintenance.ResultsThirty-six eyes of 31 consecutive patients with median age of 79 years (range, 65-89) were included. Maintenance was started after a median of 34 (range, 8-88) injections. Recurrence was observed in 20 eyes (55%). Of these, 11 eyes (31%) reactivated at 8 weeks. Median time to failure of maintenance schedule was 40 weeks by Kaplan-Meier analysis. Baseline demographic and anatomic characteristics were not associated with failure of maintenance schedule.ConclusionIn treatment-experienced eyes that respond completely to every-4-week aflibercept, maintenance therapy with every-8-week injections can only temporarily maintain anatomic success with the majority of eyes developing recurring activity. This regimen fails early in one third of eyes and has a median effective duration of 40 weeks. Aflibercept appears to be inadequate to maintain control of exudation in most eyes in at least half of eyes undergoing long-term therapy

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