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Surgical Extraction of Subfoveal Choroidal New Vessels and Submacular Haemorrhage in Age-related Macular Degeneration: Results of a Prospective Study

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Specialty Ophthalmology
Date 1999 Feb 10
PMID 9951635
Citations 20
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Abstract

Background: The surgical extraction of subfoveal choroidal new vessels (CNV) is one of several possibilities to treat subfoveal CNV or haemorrhages in age-related macular degeneration (ARMD).

Methods: Prospective study, follow-up 3-6 months. Clinical and angiographic differentiation of three subgroups: (1) subfoveal well-defined CNV (24 eyes); (2) subfoveal ill-defined CNV with or without well-defined components (10 eyes); (3) submacular haemorrhages (20 eyes).

Results: The mean and median visual acuity and the proportion of eyes with > or = 20/200 vision increased slightly in group 1 and decreased slightly in group 2; the differences were not significant. Group 3 demonstrated mean improvement but was heterogeneous, depending on the site and type of underlying CNV. The proportion of eyes with 3 or more lines of improvement after 3 months was 35.3% (7/17), 10% (1/10) and 38.9% (7/18) respectively. The proportion of eyes with a loss of 3 or more lines after 3 months was 5.9% (1/17), 20% (2/10) and 5.6% (1/18) respectively. The recurrence rate was 29.2% (7/24), 8.3% (1/11) and 25% (5/20). Intraoperative complications were iatrogenic central tears in 7.3% (4/55), peripheral tears in 14.5% (8/55) and peripheral retinal detachment in 3.6% (2/55). A postoperative retinal detachment was observed in 2 of 55 eyes (3.6%). All these complications could be managed without ill effect.

Conclusion: Subfoveal surgery might preserve remaining retinal function in eyes with well-defined CNV. However, subgroups of the MPS subfoveal laser trials with comparable initial visual acuity demonstrated postoperative functional stabilisation and similar recurrence rates in well-defined CNV. Though selected cases of submacular haemorrhage did profit from surgery, TPA-assisted gas injection will probably be a better alternative. Unfortunately, surgery for ill-defined CNV, found in the vast majority of eyes with exudative ARMD, seems to worsen the natural course. Surgery has to be combined with restoration of Bruch's membrane before it can become a possible therapeutic option in ARMD.

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