| Literature DB >> 23365785 |
Scott D Schoenberger1, Stephen J Kim.
Abstract
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are used extensively in ophthalmology for pain and photophobia after photorefractive surgery and to reduce miosis, inflammation, and cystoid macular edema following cataract surgery. In recent years, the US Food and Drug Administration has approved new topical NSAIDs and previously approved NSAIDs have been reformulated. These changes may allow for greater drug penetration into the retina and thereby offer additional therapeutic advantages. For example, therapeutic effects on diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration may now be achievable. We provide an updated review on the scientific rationale and clinical use of NSAIDs for retinal disease.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23365785 PMCID: PMC3556848 DOI: 10.1155/2013/281981
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Inflam ISSN: 2042-0099
Studies that investigated topical NSAIDs for exudative AMD.
| Study | Design, sample size and study duration | NSAID | Treatment group(s) | Outcomes | Author conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boyer et al. | Randomized, prospective, placebo-controlled | Diclofenac 0.1% | Diclofenac with PDT (C) versus PDT for subfoveal classic CNV | No improvement in VA, lesion area, GLD, fluorescein leakage, or CMT | No added benefit of diclofenac to PDT for subfoveal classic CNV |
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| Grant | Retrospective, comparative | Bromfenac 0.09% | Bromfenac with IVR (C) versus IVR for wet AMD | VA increased more in C group ( | Combination therapy with bromfenac may be more efficacious than IVR alone |
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| Zweifel et al. | Retrospective, uncontrolled | Bromfenac 0.09% | Bromfenac with IVR/IVB for persistent SRF/IRF | VA and CMT unchanged at end of study | No added benefit of bromfenac to standard of care |
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| Chen et al. | Retrospective, uncontrolled | Nepafenac 0.1% | Nepafenac with IVR/IVB for persistent SRF/IRF/PED | VA and CMT unchanged at end of study | No significant change in VA or OCT with the addition of nepafenac |
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| Flaxel et al. | Randomized, prospective, controlled, | Bromfenac 0.09% | Bromfenac with IVR (C) versus IVR for new/recurrent exudative AMD | No difference for VA and no. of injections, but | Combination therapy with bromfenac may be more efficacious than IVR alone |
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| Gomi et al. | Randomized, prospective, placebo-controlled, | Bromfenac 0.1% | Bromfenac with IVR (C) versus IVR for exudative AMD | Fewer injections in C group ( | Bromfenac may reduce the need for intravitreal injections |
NSAID: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; AMD: age-related macular degeneration; C: combination; PDT: photodynamic therapy; CNV: choroidal neovascularization; VA: visual acuity; GLD: greatest linear dimension; CMT: central macular thickness; IVR: intravitreal ranibizumab; IVB: intravitreal bevacizumab; SRF: subretinal fluid; IRF: intraretinal fluid; PED: pigment epithelial detachment; OCT: optical coherence tomography.
Studies treating diabetic macular edema with intravitreal NSAIDs.
| Study | Sample size and duration | NSAID | Treatment group(s) | Visual outcomes | Anatomic outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soheilian et al. | 5 eyes | Diclofenac 500 mcg in 0.1 mL | Diclofenac only (no comparison) | VA improved in 2, worsened in 2, unchanged in 1 | CMT worsened in 4 of 5 at 2 weeks, mean CMT worsened at 8 weeks |
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| Reis Ado et al. | 40 eyes | Ketorolac 500 mcg in 0.1 mL | Ketorolac (20 eyes) versus control (20 fellow eyes) | VA improvement seen in treated eye over fellow eye ( | No difference in foveal thickness or macular volume seen between groups |
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| Maldonado et al. | 25 eyes | Ketorolac 3000 mcg in 0.1 mL | Ketorolac only (no comparison) | VA improved ≥5 letters in 28% at 30 days | No significant improvement in macular thickness |
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| Elbendary and Shahin | 32 eyes | Diclofenac 500 mcg in 0.1 mL | Diclofenac (16 eyes) versus 4 mg IVT (16 eyes) | No difference in final mean VA or improvement | Decreased CMT seen in both groups but not significantly different |
NSAID: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; VA: visual acuity; CMT: central macular thickness; IVT: intravitreal triamcinolone.