AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the effectiveness of pegaptanib as a maintenance therapy in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (NV-AMD) after initial induction treatments.
  • Conducted as a phase IV open-label study, it involved subjects previously treated for NV-AMD, with pegaptanib administered once every six weeks for 48 weeks, allowing for additional treatments if needed.
  • Results showed significant visual acuity improvement and stability in optical coherence tomography measurements during maintenance, suggesting an induction-maintenance strategy may benefit NV-AMD patients, especially those with other health conditions needing ongoing treatment.

Article Abstract

Aim: To assess the efficacy of pegaptanib as maintenance therapy in neovascular age-related macular degeneration (NV-AMD) patients after induction therapy.

Methods: A phase IV, prospective, open-label, uncontrolled exploratory study including subjects with subfoveal NV-AMD who had had one to three induction treatments 30-120 days before entry and showed investigator-determined clinical/anatomical NV-AMD improvement. Lesions in the study eye were: any subtype, 12 or fewer disc areas; postinduction centre point thickness (CPT) 275 μm or less or thinning of 100 μm or more (optical coherence tomography); visual acuity (VA) 20/20-20/400. Intravitreal pegaptanib 0.3 mg was administered as maintenance every 6 weeks for 48 weeks with follow-up to week 54. Booster treatment additional unscheduled treatment for wet age-related macular degeneration, was allowed in the study eye at the investigators' discretion for clinical deterioration.

Results: Of 568 enrolled subjects, 86% completed 1 year of pegaptanib. Mean VA improvement during induction (49.6 to 65.5 letters) was well preserved (54-week mean 61.8 letters). Mean CPT was relatively stable during maintenance (20 μm increase during the study). Fifty per cent did not receive unscheduled booster treatment to week 54; 46% did have one such booster (mean 147 days after maintenance initiation).

Conclusions: An induction-maintenance strategy, using non-selective then selective vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors, could be considered for NV-AMD. This approach may have particular relevance for patients with systemic comorbidities who require long-term anti-VEGF therapy for NV-AMD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2991041PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjo.2009.174946DOI Listing

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