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Stereotactic radiotherapy for wet age-related macular degeneration (INTREPID): influence of baseline characteristics on clinical response

Publication |
2015

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine which patients respond best to stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) for neovascular age-related macular degeneration. METHODS: Participants (n = 230) receiving intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor injections for neovascular age-related macular degeneration enrolled in a randomized, double-masked sham-controlled trial comparing 16 Gray, 24 Gray, or Sham SRT.

In a post hoc analysis, participants were grouped according to their baseline characteristics, to determine if these influenced SRT efficacy. RESULTS: At 52 weeks, SRT was most effective for lesions LESS-THAN OR EQUAL TO4 mm in greatest linear dimension and with a macular volume greater than the median value of 7.4 mm.

For 26% of the participants with both these characteristics, SRT resulted in 55% fewer ranibizumab injections (2.08 vs. 4.60; P = 0.0002), a mean visual acuity change that was 5.33 letters superior to sham (+2.18 vs. -3.15 letters; P = 0.0284), and a 71.1-μm greater reduction in mean central subfield thickness (-122.6 vs. -51.5 μm; P = 0.027). Other features associated with a positive response to SRT included pigment epithelial detachment and the absence of fibrosis.

CONCLUSION: Stereotactic radiotherapy is most effective for neovascular age-related macular degeneration lesions that are actively leaking at the time of treatment, and no larger than the 4-mm treatment zone.