Analysis of intravitreal bevacizumab treatment for macular oedema due to retinal vein occlusion

Author:

Balla Szabolcs1ORCID,Zold Eszter1,Potor Laszlo2,Lukucz Balazs3,Vajas Attila1,Ujhelyi Bernadett1ORCID,Nagy Valeria1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ophthalmology, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary

2. Research Groups, MTA-DE Vascular Biology, Thrombosis and Haemostasis Research Group, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary

3. Department of Technology and Economics, University of Budapest, Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Purpose: Our aim was to analyse the clinical effect of intravitreal bevacizumab treatment for macular oedema due to central/branch retinal vein occlusion (CRVO/BRVO). The end points were final best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), BCVA improvement, final central 1-mm macular subfield thickness (CST) and change in CST. Methods: Our study included 34 CRVO and 25 BRVO patients. Patients received intravitreal bevacizumab (IVB) treatment at our department. Our control group consisted of 50 CRVO and 30 BRVO patients, who had not received this treatment because their disease developed before the anti-VEGF treatment became available. For statistical analysis, two-sample t-test, Pearson’s correlation, and ANOVA were used. The level of significance was defined at p < 0.05. Results: With the two-sample t-test we found significant improvement of BCVA in the IVB-treated group (CRVO: 0.171 ± 0.270, p1 = 3.25×10-4; BRVO: 0.215 ± 0.282, p2 = 5.52×10-4). The difference in BCVA improvement was also significant compared to the control group (CRVO: p1 = 3.46×10-4; BRVO: p2 = 0.003). Significant decrease was observed in the CST in the treated group (CRVO: -345.114 ± 280.577, p1 = 6.94×10-9; BRVO: –151.875 ± 174.341, p2 = 1.67×10-4). In case of BRVO patients the final BCVA was significantly better in the treated group (0.617 ± 0.334) compared to the control group (0.406 ± 0.357), p = 0.016. Conclusion: IVB treatment results in significantly better final visual acuity and leads to significantly increased BCVA improvement compared to patients with RVO-induced macular oedema receiving no treatment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Ophthalmology,General Medicine

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