3.9 Article

Aflibercept for Radiation Maculopathy Study A Prospective, Randomized Clinical Study

Journal

OPHTHALMOLOGY RETINA
Volume 3, Issue 7, Pages 561-566

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.oret.2019.02.009

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Purpose: To evaluate 2 treatment approaches to intravitreal vascular endothelial growth factor antagonist therapy in radiation maculopathy comparing aflibercept delivered by either a 6-week treatment interval or treatand-adjust interval. Design: Randomized, prospective clinical trial. Methods: Forty consecutive patients were enrolled in an institutional review board-approved clinical trial and randomized to aflibercept treatment via 1 of 2 regimens: (1) fixed, every-6-weeks treatment or (2) variable, treatand-adjust treatment centered around 6 weeks. All patients had a diagnosis of treated uveal melanoma with documented tumor control. All patients showed visually compromising radiation maculopathy confirmed by a decline in best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and spectral-domain (SD) OCT documentation of radiation maculopathy. Main Outcome Measures: Best-corrected visual acuity and SD OCT central retinal thickness at 1 year. Results: Thirty-nine of 40 patients completed the trial (97.5%) with 1 year of follow-up. Baseline study entry BCVA was 20/63 and was maintained at 20/62 at study conclusion at 60 weeks (1 year). At baseline, SD OCT mean central retinal thickness was 432 mm and improved to 294 mm at 60 weeks (P < 0.02). At the study conclusion, 42.5% of eyes (17/40) showed better than 20/50 BCVA, and only 5% of eyes (2/40) showed a BCVA worse than 20/200. In the every-6-weeks interval treatment arm, patients received 9 injections, whereas in the treat-and-adjust study arm, patients received 8.4 injections (P = 0.88, not significant). One patient experienced an inflammatory response after aflibercept injection, but this did not occur again for this patient, nor for any other study injections (1/400 injections [0.0025%]). No patients demonstrated endophthalmitis or metastatic disease or died during the study window. Conclusions: Aflibercept seems to limit vision loss associated with radiation maculopathy. In this randomized, prospective clinical study, no difference was found between a fixed 6-week treatment interval and a variable treat-and-adjust interval because virtually all patients required treatment every 6 weeks and were not able to extend. Remarkably, almost half of all treated patients maintained BCVA of 20/50 or better throughout 1 year of treatment. Aflibercept is effective in treating radiation maculopathy, but requires an ongoing treatment approach. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Ophthalmology

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