Importance of Anatomical Efficacy for Disease Control in Neovascular AMD: An Expert Opinion.
Author
Balaskas, KonstantinosAmoaku, Winfried M
Cudrnak, Tomas
Downey, Louise M
Groppe, Markus
Mahmood, Sajjad
Mehta, Hemal
Mohamed, Quresh
Mushtaq, Bushra
Severn, Philip
Vardarinos, Athanasios
Yang, Yit C
Affiliation
Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; University of Nottingham; University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust; Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS TrustPublication date
2021-04-10Subject
Ophthalmology
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) presents a significant treatment burden for patients, carers and medical retina services. However, significant debate remains regarding how best to manage nAMD when assessing disease activity by optical coherence tomography (OCT), and particularly the significance of different types of fluid and how the understanding of anatomical efficacy can influence treatment strategies. This article provides opinion on the practical implications of anatomical efficacy and significance of fluid in the management of nAMD and proposes recommendations for healthcare professionals (HCPs) to improve understanding and promote best practice to achieve disease control. Methods: An evidence-based review was performed and an expert panel debate from the Retina Outcomes Group (ROG), a forum of retinal specialists, provided insights and recommendations on the definition, role and practical implications of anatomical efficacy and the significance of fluid at the macula in the management of nAMD. Results: The ROG has developed recommendations for achieving disease control through a zero-tolerance approach to the presence of fluid in nAMD as patients who avoid fluctuations in fluid at the macula have better visual outcomes. Recommendations cover five key areas: service protocol, training, regimen, multidisciplinary teams and engagement. This approach facilitates more standardised protocol-based treatment strategies. Conclusions: Targeting a fluid-free macula and aiming for disease control are essential to improve outcomes. As new therapies and technologies become available, drying the macula and maintaining disease control will become even more achievable. The outlined recommendations aim to promote best practice among HCPs and medical retina services to improve patient outcomes.Citation
Balaskas K, Amoaku WM, Cudrnak T, Downey LM, Groppe M, Mahmood S, Mehta H, Mohamed Q, Mushtaq B, Severn P, Vardarinos A, Yang YC. Importance of Anatomical Efficacy for Disease Control in Neovascular AMD: An Expert Opinion. Ophthalmol Ther. 2021 Jun;10(2):231-243.Type
ArticleOther
PMID
33840064Journal
Ophthalmology and TherapyPublisher
Springerae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s40123-021-00342-5