Older patients with myopic choroidal neovascularization (mCNV) have poorer vision than their younger counterparts and are more likely to develop concomitant vitreoretinal interface abnormalities (VIA), a recent study has found.
“In addition, baseline best-corrected visual acuity [BCVA], external limiting membrane [ELM], CNV lesion size, and CNV lesion location were correlated with BCVA after 1 year of conbercept therapy. Baseline central macular thickness [CMT] may be a predictor of relapse in older mCNV patients during the one-year follow-up,” the researchers said.
Sixty-four eyes from 64 newly diagnosed CNV patients (mean age, 51.03±13.56 years, 67.2 percent women) were included in the study. Thirty-nine were aged ≥50 years, while the remaining 25 were younger.
Twenty-one patients in the older group had 12-month follow-up data available and were included in further analyses. VIA was significantly more visualized in the older group, according to Fisher’s exact test (p=0.032). Mean BCVA was higher in the older group (p=0.018) and subfoveal choroidal thickness (SFCT) was lower (p=0.004).
Stepwise multivariate regression analysis found that baseline BCVA (B, 0.517; p=0.013) and ELM integrity (B, 0.418; p=0.036) were significant and independent prognostic factors of final BCVA after 12 months of follow-up.
Recurrence of mCNV was detected in seven of the 21 elderly patients (33.3 percent), occurring after an average of 9.40±4.83 months after the first injection. Higher baseline CMT was a significant predictor of recurrence.