-
Clinical Ophthalmology
-
About Dovepress
Open access peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals.
-
Open Access
Dove Medical Press is now a member of the Open Access Initiative
-
An Author's Guide
A guide to help authors get their paper published.
-
Advocacy
Support Open Access and Dove Press
-
Reprints
Promotional Article Monitoring - further details
-
Favored Author Program
Real benefits for authors, including fast-track processing of papers.
Treatment of age-related macular degeneration: focus on ranibizumab
Review
(3210) Views (790) Full article downloads
Authors: Martin S Spitzer, Focke Ziemssen, Karl U Bartz-Schmidt, Faik Gelisken, Peter Szurman
Published Date March 2008
Volume 2008:2(1) Pages 1 - 14
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/OPTH.S1959
Martin S Spitzer, Focke Ziemssen, Karl U Bartz-Schmidt, Faik Gelisken, Peter Szurman
Tuebingen University Eye Center, University of Tuebingen, Germany
Abstract: Ranibizumab, a humanized antigen-binding fragment (Fab) that binds all isoforms of VEGF-A, significantly slows down loss of vision and causes significant visual improvement in many patients with choroidal neovascularization (CNV) due to exudative age-related macular degeneration (AMD). These benefits of intravitreal ranibizumab apply to all angiographic subtypes of neovascular AMD and across all lesion sizes when the drug is injected at monthly intervals as shown in two pivotal phase III trials (ANCHOR and MARINA). The results from the PrONTO study suggest that less frequent treatment with ranibizumab through a variable dosing regimen dependent on optical coherence tomography (OCT) findings is a treatment option that results in comparably favorable visual outcomes. Currently, it is unclear whether combination therapy of ranibizumab with photodynamic therapy (PDT) provides any significant advantage over ranibizumab monotherapy (FOCUS trial); however, the combination of PDT and ranibizumab may decrease the need for frequent retreatment. This question will be addressed in the SUMMIT trial. Therapy with ranibizumab is generally very well tolerated with a low rate of seriously adverse ocular events or systemic side-effects. The advent of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors has revolutionized the therapy of neovascular AMD. Ranibizumab at the moment appears to be the most effective approved treatment for neovascular AMD.
Keywords: Lucentis, ranibizumab, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), age-related macular degeneration (AMD), neovascular, exudative AMD, treatment
Readers of this article also read:
Radiolucency below the crown of mandibular horizontal incompletely impacted third molars and acute inflammation in men with diabetes
Health literacy and health seeking behavior among older men in a middle-income nation
Functional mobility and balance in community-dwelling elderly submitted to multisensory versus strength exercises
Detection of retinal changes in Parkinson's disease with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography
A systematic writing program as a tool in the grief process: part 1
Editorial
A case of recurrent bloody tears
Corrigendum
Helicobacter pylori infection and primary open-angle glaucoma: is there a connection?
- Journal Indexing
See where all the Dove Press journals are indexed
- Interested in being a peer-reviewer?
Click here to register.
- Insight into 144 patients with ocular vascular events during VEGF antagonist injections
- Endophthalmitis: Pathogenesis, clinical presentation, management, and perspectives
- Protection of neurons in the retinal ganglion cell layer against excitotoxicity by the N-acylethanolamine, N-linoleoylethanolamine
- A computer-based anaglyphic system for the treatment of amblyopia




