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Review on the Safety and Efficacy of Brolucizumab for Neovascular Age-Related Macular Degeneration From Major Studies and Real-World Data

Journal

ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 168-183

Publisher

ASIA-PACIFIC ACAD OPHTHALMOLOGY-APAO
DOI: 10.1097/APO.0000000000000602

Keywords

brolucizumab; intraocular inflammation; real-world data; safety and efficacy

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Frequent injections of antivascular endothelial growth factor in neovascular age-related macular degeneration often result in poor compliance and suboptimal outcomes. Brolucizumab, a longer-acting agent, has been approved for treating nAMD and has shown reduced injection frequency, better anatomic outcomes, and noninferior vision gains compared with aflibercept. However, there is a higher-than-expected incidence of intraocular inflammation associated with brolucizumab, requiring proper preinjection screening and high-vigilance care.
Frequent antivascular endothelial growth factor injections in neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) often lead to poor compliance and suboptimal outcomes. A longer-acting agent has been a pressing unmet need until recently. Brolucizumab, an antivascular endothelial growth factor agent, is a single-chain antibody fragment approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on October 8, 2019, for treating nAMD. It delivers more molecules at equivalent volumes of aflibercept, thus achieving a longer-lasting effect. We reviewed literature published in English between January 2016 and October 2022 from MEDLINE, PubMed, Cochrane database, Embase, and Google scholar using the keywords: Brolucizumab, real-world data, intraocular inflammation (IOI), safety, and efficacy. Brolucizumab showed reduced injection frequency, better anatomic outcomes, and noninferior vision gains compared with aflibercept in HAWK and HARRIER studies. However, post hoc studies on brolucizumab revealed a higher-than-expected incidence of IOI, leading to the early termination of 3 studies: MERLIN, RAPTOR, and RAVEN for nAMD, branch retinal vein occlusion, and central retinal vein occlusion, respectively. Contrastingly real-world data showed encouraging outcomes in terms of fewer IOI cases. The subsequent amendment of the treatment protocol resulted in reduced IOI. Thereafter US FDA approved its use in diabetic macular edema on June 1, 2022. Based on major studies and real-world data, this review shows that brolucizumab is effective for treating naive and refractory nAMD. The risk of IOI is acceptable and manageable, but proper preinjection screening and high-vigilance care of IOI are needed. More studies are warranted to evaluate further the incidence, best prevention, and treatment measures for IOI.

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