J R Soc Med 2004;97:166-169
doi:10.1258/jrsm.97.4.166
© 2004 Royal Society of Medicine
Treatment of age-related macular degeneration
Andrew C Browning FRCOphth
Winfried M Amoaku PhD FRCOphth
Harminda S Dua PhD FRCOphth
Division of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Centre, University Hospital, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH,
UK
Correspondence to: W M Amoaku
E-mail:
WMA{at}nottingham.ac.uk
 |
INTRODUCTION
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Age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) is the most common cause
of
irreversible central visual loss in the elderly populations
of the
industrialized
world,
1-3
and will place increasing demands
on health services as people live longer.
For many years, the
only treatment proven to be effective in arresting the
progression
of the wet form of ARMD was laser
photocoagulation.
4
Even then,
only a small proportion of patients within a specific disease
subgroup
have been shown to benefit from this treatment, and the rate
of
disease recurrence (paradoxically often under the fovea)
is
high.
5 Lately,
researchers have developed novel strategies
based on improved understanding of
the pathophysiology, and
this article summarizes recent advances in
treatment.
 |
DISEASE CLASSIFICATION
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ARMD is probably a polygenic disease affected by multiple environmental
factors.
This may account for the wide range of phenotypes. Customarily,
it is
classified into a dry or atrophic form
(
Figure 1) and
a wet or
neovascular form (
Figure 2).
The dry form of disease
is characterized by the slow progressive atrophy of
macular
retinal pigment epithelium and the underlying choroid, leading
to
secondary photoreceptor death. The wet form is characterized
by new blood
vessel growth from the inner choroid, stimulated
by a vascular endothelial
growth factor, through defects in
Bruch's membrane to the potential space
underneath the retinal
pigment epithelium and retina. These new vessels are
associated
with massive exudation of fluid and lipid, which severely damages
the
photoreceptors.
6
On fluorescein angiography the neovascularization
may be graded as classic,
occult or mixed
6
(
Figure 3)a
classification
that is helpful for prognostic purposes and for subgroup
analysis
in clinical trials, since the natural history seems to differ
between
subtypes.

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Figure 1. Fundus photograph showing atrophic or dry age-related macular
degeneration. Note the well demarcated area of central retinal, retinal
pigment epithelium and choroidal atrophy revealing the pale underlying sclera.
Colour version available on
[www.jrsm.org]
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Figure 2. Fundus photograph showing extensive wet age-related macular
degeneration. Note the large central area of retinal elevation surrounded
by retinal haemorrhages and lipid exudates. Colour version available on
[www.jrsm.org]
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Figure 3. Fundus fluorescein angiogram showing marked central leakage (bright
white area) from a subfoveal lesion classified as classic with occult
(a) at presentation and (b) three months after photodynamic
therapy. Note that the central area of leakage is much reduced in
(b) denoting closure of the choroidal neovascular membrane
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 |
ANTIOXIDANT SUPPLEMENTATION
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For established dry ARMD, no treatment has been proven effective
by
randomized trial. However, subgroup analysis of a multicentre
randomized
placebo-controlled trial (AREDS trial) suggested
that progression to advanced
disease can be reduced in high-risk
patients by daily supplements of vitamins
C (500 mg) and E (400
IU), zinc (80 mg) and beta carotene (15
mg).
7 This approach
was
based on the hypothesis that free radicals are involved in pathogenesis
and
that oxidative damage to the retina might be prevented by antioxidant
supplements.
8,9
On
the basis of these results the AREDS research group recommend
that persons
older than 55 years should have dilated eye examinations
to determine their
risk of developing advanced ARMD; then, those
with high-risk characteristics
(
Box 1) or with vision loss due
to
advanced ARMD in one eye, and without contraindications such
as smoking,
should consider taking supplements of antioxidants
plus zinc.
 |
PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY
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Before 1999, the only treatment proven by randomized controlled
trial to
provide long-term visual benefit in wet ARMD (subfoveal
choroidal
neovascularization) was laser
photocoagulation.
10
Unfortunately,
the treatment is associated with an immediate and dramatic drop
in
Snellen visual acuity of up to 6 linesa consequence that
most
patients and their ophthalmologists are not prepared to
accept, so uptake has
been low. In current photodynamic therapy
(PDT), a photosensitizer
(verteporfin) is injected intravenously
and the neovascular lesion is then
irradiated with a diode laser
(689 nm) for 83 seconds. The excited
photosensitizer generates
free radicals which, by damaging vascular
endothelium, cause
thrombosis within the irradiated
vessels.
11
In 1999, initial results from the TAP trial indicated that, after twelve
months' follow-up, the proportion of patients losing fewer than 15 letters on
a standard visual acuity chart (which corresponds to about three lines or
less) was 67% with verteporfin PDT and 39% with
placebo.12 At
twenty-four months this advantage was maintained, the difference being 59%
versus 31%.13 Since
the occluded vasculature commonly recanalized, patients required an average of
5.6 treatments in the twenty-four months of the study, though most of these
were in the first year. An open-label extension of the study indicated that
visual acuity was stable during the third
year14but,
as the authors point out, this result must be treated with caution since only
one-third of the original group could be examined at thirty-six months. In a
second large multicentre study (Verteporfin in Photodynamic therapy or VIP),
confined to patients with pure occult choroidal neovascular
lesions, the proportion of patients losing fewer than 15 letters on the visual
acuity chart was 45% in the PDT group and 32% in the placebo
group.15 Overall,
the TAP and VIP investigations have shown significant benefit from PDT in
patients with predominantly classic or pure occult subfoveal
neovascularization.
On the basis of numbers needed to treat (NNT), PDT is one of the most
effective treatments in medicine. Only 3.6 patients have to be treated to
prevent one case of moderate visual loss (15 letter loss on the visual acuity
chart).16 This can
be compared with the use of topical antibiotics for treatment of acute
bacterial conjunctivitis (NNT=6) or of warfarin for the prevention of stroke
in non-rheumatic atrial fibrillation (NNT=18). However, despite the good
clinical results, the expense of PDT makes it poorly
cost-effective.17,18
The cost/quality adjusted life year (QALY) for this treatment has been
calculated at £60 000 to £122 000 and the cost utility from
£151 000 to £182
000.18
The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) has recently issued
guidance for the use of PDT in the treatment of wet ARMD
[www.nice.org.uk].
PDT is recommended for patients with classic lesions (no occult)
in whom the best corrected visual acuity is 6/60 or better. Patients with
lesions classified as predominantly classic in nature may also be treated, but
only as part of an ongoing or new clinical trial.
 |
MACULAR RELOCATION SURGERY
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Macular translocation surgery is a technique currently undergoing
evaluation
as an alternative to photodynamic therapy or laser photocoagulation
for
subfoveal choroidal neovascular membranes (CNV). The underlying
principle
of the surgery is to relocate the neuroretina of the
fovea away from the
underlying CNV to an area of healthy retinal
pigment epithelium and choroid.
The techniques are various but
all involve a subtotal vitrectomy followed by a
partial or total
retinal detachment. The neurosensory retina can then be moved
relative
to the underlying retinal pigment epithelium either by
rotation/displacement
or by scleral shortening. The retina is reattached in
its new
position away from the CNV, which is then destroyed by laser
photocoagulation.
Although the technique is not yet widely practised in the
UK,
studies in selected patients have yielded promising results.
One-year
follow-up on 102 eyes treated with limited macular
translocation indicated
improvement (two or more lines on the
Snellen chart) in
39%.
19 A second
series of 90 patients followed
for twelve months showed at least 15 letters'
improvement in
visual acuity in 24 (27%); 37 were stable and 29
deteriorated.
20 No
long-term follow-up is yet available, but this technique
does seem to offer
hope of visual improvementunlike photodynamic
therapy, which at best
aims to stabilize. A drawback is that
such major surgery carries a risk of
complicationsincluding
proliferative vitreoretinopathy (19%), retinal
detachment (12-23%),
macular hole formation (9%)that can lead to loss
of both
central and peripheral vision.
Since ARMD is a common disease, there is scant prospect of macular
translocation surgery being made available to more than a small fraction of
patients who might benefit. Furthermore, the recurrence rate is high. There is
a need, therefore, for further randomized controlled studies to identify the
subgroups of patients who have most to gain from limited surgical
resources.
 |
TRANSPUPILLARY THERMOTHERAPY
|
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Transpupillary thermotherapy employs an infrared diode laser
whose emission
is taken up predominantly by the melanin granules
of the retinal pigment
epithelium and choroid. The resultant
localized heating effect has been used
to treat choroidal melanomas
and to close vascular channels in choroidal
neovascular membranes
while leaving the overlying retina relatively intact.
Several
small short-term studies have yielded promising results in occult
choroidal
neovascularization.
21
In
an uncontrolled pilot study, 59% of eyes with predominantly
occult disease
had lost fewer than 15 letters at twelve months'
follow-up
22an
encouraging
result since this subgroup of patients gain little from
photodynamic
therapy. A large randomized prospective clinical trial, the
TTT4CNV
trial, is now underway.
 |
PHARMACOLOGICAL INHIBITION OF ANGIOGENESIS
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It has become clear that, in the pathogenesis of choroidal
neovascularization,
endothelial growth factor (VEGF) plays a key role. Several
pilot
studies are now underway to test the effects of selectively
inhibiting
intraocular VEGF or pharmacologically altering its
action. These treatments
include intravitreal injection of an
anti-VEGF aptamer (Eyetech study) or
humanized anti-VEGF monoclonal
antibody (RhuFab
V2).
23 The aptamer
is a small stable RNA-like
molecule that binds with high affinity to VEGF.
Both the aptamer
and the humanized antibody effectively bind and inhibit the
action
of VEGF, thereby reducing the drive for intraocular angiogenesis
and
increased vascular
permeability.
24
Another approach is to
inject an anti-angiogenic steroid, either periocularly
(anecortave
acetate) or intravitreally (triamcinolone acetonide). These
steroid
molecules have potent inhbitory effects on angiogenesis and
vascular
permeability with the advantage of negligible glucocorticoid
and
mineralocorticoid actions. They are thought to work by modification
of
endothelial cell adhesion and cell junction molecules. Clinical
results are at
present sparse, but in the phase II Eyetech study
(21 patients) intravitreal
anti-VEGF aptamer was well tolerated
and a quarter of the eyes showed three
lines or more visual
improvement.
24 In a
study of 128 eyes (predominantly classic choroidal neovascularization),
vision
was preserved at twelve months in 84% receiving periocular
injections of
anecortave acetate compared with 50% of those
receiving
placebo.
25 A single
intravitreal injection of triamcinolone
acetonide had no effect on the risk of
severe visual loss during
the first year of follow-up, despite a significant
reduction
in the size of the choroidal neovascular membrane within three
months.
26
| Box 2 Ongoing research
VER Studyphotodynamic therapy using verteporfin with six-weekly
retreatments. Aim is to improve treatment efficacy by more sustained and early
neovascular membrane closure
VIO Studyphotodynamic therapy using verteporfin in occult choroidal
neovascularization
VIM Studyphotodynamic therapy study using verteporfin in minimally
classic choroidal neovascularization
TTT4AMDlarge multicentre randomized placebo controlled trial
evaluating transpupillary thermotherapy
Choroidal Neovascularization Prevention Trial (CNVPT)multicentre,
randomized controlled trial to study the effect of retinal laser
photocoagulation on the resolution of drusen
MARAN and SST trialsinternational multicentre prospective randomized
controlled trials of macular relocation compared with natural history.
|
 |
CONCLUSIONS
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Until lately, the outlook for patients with age-related macular
degeneration
was bleak; few were eligible for treatment with conventional
laser
photocoagulation. The novel treatments reviewed in this article,
though
not curative, offer at least the hope of visual stabilization.
Many of these
treatments are now being assessed in large international
multicentre trials
(Box 2).
 |
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