| Literature DB >> 30788805 |
Alireza Khodabande1, Ramak Roohipoor1, Javad Zamani1, Masoud Mirghorbani2, Hamidreza Zolfaghari1, Shahab Karami1, Bobeck S Modjtahedi3,4,5.
Abstract
Macular telangiectasia type 2 (MacTel) is a relatively rare disease without established treatments. Although MacTel was previously considered a primarily vascular condition, the thinking on its pathogenesis has shifted to it now being considered principally a neurodegenerative disease. This has resulted in a subsequent change in the approach to treatment toward neuro-protection for the non-proliferative phase of this disease. Carotenoid supplementation has had mixed results. Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) has demonstrated some promising early results, but further study is necessary to determine its actual effect. Some structural improvements have been seen in the non-proliferative phase with oral acetazolamide but without accompanying functional improvement. Anti-vascular endothelial drugs have been studied and not found to have benefit in the non-proliferative phase of disease but have demonstrated significant structural and functional value in the treatment of secondary neovascularization. There is no level I evidence for the various proposed MacTel treatments, and efforts need to be directed toward conducting multicenter randomized trials to better understand possible treatments for this condition.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-vascular endothelial growth; Macular telangiectasia; Management; Retina
Year: 2019 PMID: 30788805 PMCID: PMC6514016 DOI: 10.1007/s40123-019-0170-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmol Ther
Fig. 1Non-proliferative and proliferative phases of MacTel. 1: A 34-year-old male with bilateral progressive visual loss. Fundus photo of the right eye showed temporal parafoveal foci of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) hyperplasia with foveal pigmentary change (a). Corresponding OCT demonstrated outer retinal layer atrophy and outward configuration of the inner retinal layers while the RPE layer appeared to be intact (b). 2: A 41-year-old male, a known case of MacTel with acute onset of vision loss in the left eye. Fundus photo and OCT imaging of the left eye showed not only RPE hyperplasia and pigmentary changes but also retinal and sub-retinal hemorrhages due to RPE disruption and choroidal neovascularization (c, d). Images courtesy of Dr. Hamid Riazi
Summary of studies examining anti-vascular endothelial growth factor drugs for the treatment of non-proliferative phase of MacTel
| Author, year | Study design, evidence level | Eyes (patients) | F/U (m) | Regimen; protocol | No. of injections | Functional outcomes | Structural outcomes | Support for intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lira, 2010 [ | Case series, IV | 3 (3) | 6 | 0.5 mg IVR; a single dose injection | 1 | BCVA: 20/200, 20/100, and 20/400 improved to 20/60, 20/60, and 20/80 in the study eyes, respectively | CMT: reduced – 11, – 130, and − 126 µm from baseline of 253,287, and 331 µm in the study eyes, respectively | ++ |
| Matt, 2010 [ | Retrospective cohort, IV | 23 (13) | 32 ± 5 | 1 mg IVB (7 eyes) vs. untreated (16 eyes) Baseline injection in patients with recent visual loss, then re-injection as needed (based on OCT changes or reduced VA) | 2.3 ± 1.3 | BCVA in logMAR at the last visit: improved logMAR (0.47 ± 0.32 to 0.33 ± 0.31; Stabilization or improvement in vision on Snellen testing in TG ( | CMT at the last visit: 260 ± 83 and 201 ± 32 µm at baseline were reduced to 237 ± 69 and 199 ± 29 µm in the TG and CG, respectively ( FA staining size: smaller at month 3 ( | + |
| Roller, 2011 [ | Case series, IV | 5 (4) | 17 ± 7 | 1.25 mg IVB Baseline injection, then re-injection every 6–8 weeks until no fluid seen on the OCT | 2.2 | BCVA at 6 weeks: 1.7 ± 2 lines gained BCVA at final visit: 0.5 ± 1 lines lost | At 6 weeks: mean CMT change of +13 ± 34 and mean TPT change of +8 ± 19 µm At final visit: mean CMT change of +29 ± 27 and mean TPT change of +8 ± 32 µm | |
| Charbel, 2011 [ | Prospective cohort, IIb | 20 (10) | 12–18 | 0.5 mg IVR vs. untreated fellow eyes 12 monthly unilateral injections | 12 | BCVA change after the last treatment: no significant change compared with the baseline or compared with the CG (study eyes: +3.5 ± 5.4 letters and fellow eyes: +3.7 ± 5.9 letters; | At 4 months: transient reduction in telangiectatic-appearing capillaries and late-phase leakage in FA and significant reduction in macular thickness − 53 ± 26.8 µm from a baseline average of 333 µm in OCT At 3–5 months after the last injection: FA and OCT were similar to baseline | |
| Toy, 2012 [ | Non-randomized clinical trial, IIb | 10 (5) | 14 | 0.5 mg IVR vs. untreated fellow eyes 12 monthly unilateral injections | 12 | BCVA change after 1 year: no significant change compared with the CG (study eyes: 0.0 ± 7.5 letters and fellow eyes: +2.2 ± 1.9 letters; * BCVA change at any visit time point: | CMT after 1 year: greater decrease compared with the CG (− 11.7 ± 7.0% for study eyes and − 2.9 ± 3.5% for fellow eyes) FA leakage: greater decrease in the area of late-phase FA leakage (− 33 ± 20% for study eyes, + 1 ± 8% for fellow eyes) | + |
| Meyer, 2013 [ | Retrospective cohort, IV | 35 (19) | 81 (15–188) | 1.25 mg IVB (6 eyes) vs. untreated (29 eyes) Baseline injection, then re-injection as needed (based on OCT changes or reduced VA) | 1.6 | * BCVA change after 3 years: -1.2 ± 1.5 lines for untreated eyes and -1.0 ± 1.8 lines for IVB eyes (no significant difference) | No significant difference in structural changes in OCT compared with the CG Transient reduction in FA leakage for 3 to 5 months after the last injection | |
| Sigler, 2013 [ | Case series, IV | 48 | 24 ± 13 | 2.5 mg IVB (15 eyes) vs. untreated (33 eyes) Baseline injection, then re-injection every 4–6 weeks until no fluid seen on the OCT | 2.5 ± 3.5 | BCVA change at final visit: 0.02 ± 0.10 logMAR in TG compared with 0.09 ± 0.29 logMAR in CG ( | Transient decreased leakage in FA for 1 to 3.5 months after the last injection | |
| Veloso, 2013 [ | Case series, IV | 10 (5) | 15 | 1.25 mg IVB 3 monthly injections | 3 | No BCVA improvement during the study | Initial improvement in FA leakage and CMT, but returned to the baseline levels after 12 months | |
| Do, 2014 [ | Randomized clinical trial without control group, IIb | 20 (10) | 6 | Randomized to either 0.3 mg or 0.5 mg IVR unilateral injection at month 1 and 2 with optional retreatment at 3–5 months. | 4 (0.3) vs 4.4 (0.5) | * BCVA change at 3 months: 4 letters in both 0.3 mg and 0.5 mg IVR groups vs. 3 letters in fellow eyes (no intergroup difference) BCVA change at 6 months: 4, 8, and 5 letters in 0.3, 0.5 mg, and fellow eye groups (no intergroup difference) | CMT change at 3 months: +1, – 11, and 0 µm in 0.3, 0.5 mg, and fellow eye groups, respectively. * CMT change at 6 months: – 6, – 26, and – 6 µm, respectively. Decreased CMT compared with the baseline in 0.5 mg group at month 3, but no difference at month 6. (No intergroup analysis report) Decreased FA leakage in both ranibizumab groups compared with CG | |
| Escariao, 2014 [ | Case report, – | 1 (1) | 12 | 1.25 mg IVB a single dose injection (OD) | 1 | BCVA improvement from 20/60 to 20/30 at last follow-up | Fully regression of the subfoveal fluid, decreased CMT and decreased FA leakage at last follow-up | ++ |
| Kupitz, 2015 [ | Non-randomized clinical trial, IIb | 18 (9) | 72 ± 5 | 0.5 mg IVR vs. untreated fellow eyes 12 monthly unilateral injections | 12 | Reduced BCVA ≥ 2 lines at last follow-up: occurred more in the TG (4 vs. 1) Paracentral scotoma at last follow-up: occurred more in the TG (7 vs. 2) | Neovascularization occurred more in the TG at last follow-up (4 vs. none) | |
| Aydogan, 2016 [ | Case series, IV | 6 (5) | 26 ± 11 | 1.25 mg IVB Baseline injection, then re-injection with persistent intraretinal fluid/cysts or decreased BCVA | 2.3 | BCVA change at 1 month: 0.48 ± 0.29 at baseline improved to 0.68 ± 0.36, but not significant BCVA change at final visit: improved to 0.77 ± 0.35 from baseline ( | CMT at 1 month: reduction of – 85 ± 153 from baseline of 328 ± 139, but not significant. CMT at 6 months: reduction of – 65 ± 142 from baseline, but not significant | + |
| Bénichou, 2017 [ | Case report, – | 2 (1) | # | IAI 3 monthly unilateral injections | 3 | No significant improvement in BCVA at last follow-up | No significant improvement in CMT at last follow-up |
CG control group, CMT central macular thickness, FA fluorescein angiography, F/U follow-up, IAI intravitreal aflibercept injection, IVB intravitreal bevacizumab, IVR intravitreal ranibizumab, No. mean number of injections, OCT optical coherent tomography, TG treatment group, TPT temporal parafoveal thickness, BCVA best corrected visual acuity, # not mentioned
Studies on treatments other than anti-vascular endothelial growth factor drugs in the treatment of the non-proliferative phase of MacTel
| Treatment | Author, year | Study design, evidence level | Eyes (patients) | F/U (m) | Regimen; protocol | Functional outcomes | Structural outcomes | Support for intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IVT | Toklu, 2011 [ | Case report, – | 2 (1) | 3 | 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide (OD) and 1.25 mg IVB (OS); a single dose injection | BCVA at 1st week post treatment: 5/100 (OD) and 5/10 (OS) improved to 5/10 and 10/10, respectively BCVA at 1 month and 3 months: similar to the 1st week | FA hyperfluorescence: began to decrease at the 1st week post treatment, which remained the same during 3 months (OU) | + |
| PPV | Sigler, 2013 [ | Case series, IV | 5 (3) | 24 | PPV ± ILM peeling | BCVA improved significantly in 2 eyes, stabilized in 2 eyes, and reduced in 1 eye | * No improvement in structural changes in OCT | + |
| Laser | Steigerwalt, 2012 [ | Case report, – | 1 (1) | 4 | ICG-DEP; 4 focal argon laser treatments at 2-3 weeks intervals | No change in BCVA No change in central scotoma | * Decrease in CMT from 487 µm to 239 µm | + |
| Meyer, 2013 [ | Retrospective cohort, IV | 33 (19) | 81 (40–160) | 4 eyes received frequency doubled YAG-laser (532 nm) vs. 29 untreated eyes | BCVA change at 3 years: – 1.2 ± 1.5 lines in untreated eyes – 1.9 ± 1.9 lines in photocoagulation group (not significant) BCVA change at 5 years: – 2.0 ± 2.4 lines in untreated eyes – 2.8 ± 2.2 lines in photocoagulation group (not significant) | No significant difference in structural changes in OCT compared with the CG | ||
| Zehetner, 2013 [ | Case series, IV | 5 (4) | 12 | Treating with reduced-fluence PDT and then intravitreal ranibizumab within 24 h (2 eyes received re-treatment with the same regimen after 6 months) | 2 eyes with improved BCVA, 2 eyes with worsened BCVA, and 1 eye with no change in BCVA | No report of structural outcome | ||
| CAI | Chen, 2014 [ | Retrospective cohort, IV | 26 (13) | 5.8 (1–9) | Methazolamide 50 mg BD (4 patients) or acetazolamide (4 patients) 500 mg BD or observation (5 patients) | 1–2 letter improvement in BCVA, but not significant | Reduced cystic changes and CMT in acetazolamide group but not methazolamide compared with the control group; CMT change in cetazolamide group: – 20.1 ± 10.0 µm, CMT change in methazolamide group: – 6.25 ± 8.73 µm, | + |
| Carotenoid | Tan, 2016 [ | Retrospective cohort IV | 26 (13) | 15 ± 5 | Treating all patients with lutein 10 mg, meso-zeaxanthin 10 mg, and zeaxanthin 2 mg daily | Improved BCVA in 13% of patients and a reduction in the percentage of patients who had a worsening vision (25–4%; | Mild improvement in OCT structures in the first 6 months after starting LMZ3 supplements | ++ |
| Choi, 2017 [ | RCT, I b | 16 (8) | 24 | Randomized to 10 or 20 milligrams/day of zeaxanthin | Subjective BCVA improvement but no improvement in objective BCVA | Enhanced ring-shaped pattern of macular pigment without increase in pigment concentration at the central fovea No improvement in foveal OCT structures | ||
| CNTF | Chew, 2015 [ | Clinical trial (evaluation of safety), II b | 14 (7) | 36 | Unilateral implantation of the CNTF-secreting capsule (eye with worse VA) vs. untreated fellow eyes | BCVA and microperimetry scotoma remained unchanged from the baseline | OCT structures and ERG dark adaptation remained unchanged from the baseline Safe and well tolerated | |
| Clemons, 2016 [ | Clinical trial, II b | 14 (7) | 48 | Unilateral implantation of the CNTF-secreting capsule (eye with worth VA) vs. untreated fellow eyes | BCVA improvement in treated eyes (compared with the control eyes: +6.67 ± 1.52 letter, Improved microperimetry in treated eyes ( | No significant difference in OCT structures | + | |
| Chew, 2018 [ | Clinical trial, II b | 99 (67) | 24 | Patients were randomized 1:1 to implantation of the CNTF-secreting capsule and sham | At 24 months: The difference in mean retinal sensitivity in microperimetry was 15.81 ± 8.93 dB ( Reading speed did not reduce in treatment group, while reduced -13.9 words per minute in sham ( | At 24 months: The difference in mean area of photoreceptor disruption (photoreceptor loss) was 0.05 ± 0.03 mm2 ( | ++ |
CAI carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, CG control group, CMT central macular thickness, CNTF ciliary neurotrophic factor, ERG electroretinogram, FA fluorescein angiography, F/U follow-up, ICG-DEP indocyanine green dye-enhanced photocoagulation, IVB intravitreal bevacizumab, IVT intravitreal triamcinolone, OCT optical coherent tomography, PDT photodynamic therapy, PPV pars plana vitrectomy, RCT randomized clinical trial, TG trial group, TPT temporal parafoveal thickness, BCVA best corrected visual acuity
Studies on anti-vascular endothelial growth factor treatment for the proliferative phase of MacTel
| Author, year | Study design, evidence level | Eyes (patients) | F/U (m) | Regimen; protocol | No. of injections | Functional outcomes | Structural outcomes | Support for intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roller, 2011 [ | Case series, IV | 9 (8) | 17 ± 9 | 1.25 mg IVB; baseline injection, then re-injection every 6–8 weeks until no fluid seen on the OCT | 4.8 | BCVA at 6 weeks: 1.7 ± 2 lines gained BCVA at final visit: 1.1 ± 3 lines lost | At 6 weeks: mean CMT reduction of – 63 ± 58 and mean TPT reduction of – 30 ± 39 µm At final visit: mean CMT reduction of –48 ± 89 and mean TPT reduction of – 18 ± 35 µm | + |
| Narayanan, 2012 [ | Case series, IV | 16 (16) | 12 (3–43) | 1.25 mg IVB (12 eyes) and 0.5 mg IVR (4 eyes); baseline injection, then re-injection until no activity on FA, retinal thickening on OCT or subretinal fluid on OCT | 1.9 (IVB) and 2 (IVR) | Improved BCVA compared with the baseline (0.17 ± 0.16 Snellen equivalent at baseline and 0.27 ± 0.14 at final visit; No intergroup comparison was done | CMT improved from 235 ± 108 to 174 ± 56 µm but not significant ( No intergroup comparison was done | + |
Ozkaya, 2013 [ | Case report, – | 1 (1) | 26 | 1.25 mg IVB; 3 monthly injections, then re-injection as clinically required (based on OCT changes or reduced VA) | 6 | BCVA improvement from 20/100 to 20/40 | CMT decreased from 318 to 198 µm | ++ |
Dave, 2013 [ | Case report, – | 2 (1) | 6 | 0.5 mg IVR (OD) and PDT (OS) 2 monthly injection (OD) PDT as the standard protocol (OS) | 2 | BCVA improvement from 20/80 to 20/40 in both eyes | Decrease in the CMT and FA leakage in both eyes | ++ |
| Alkin, 2016 [ | Case series, IV | 4 (4) | 12–24 | 1.25 mg IVB (3 eyes) and 0.5 mg IVR (1 eye); # No predefined protocol | 3.6 (IVB) and 3 (IVR) | In one case of IVB, BCVA of 20/50 decreased to 20/100 In three others, BCVA 20/63,20/100, and 20/100 improved to 20/50,20/30, and 20/63, respectively | CMT was reported in 3 cases and reduced – 60, – 51, and – 88 µm from baseline of 318, 324, and 391 µm, respectively | ++ |
| Toygar, 2016 [ | Case series, IV | 25(20) | 41 ± 34 | 1.25 mg IVB; Baseline injection, then re-injection as clinically indicated (based on OCT changes or reduced VA) | 8.4 ± 11.1 | Improved mean BCVA of 20/91 to 20/62 ( | Improved mean CMT of 254 µm to 205 µm ( | ++ |
| Abdelaziz, 2016 [ | Case series, IV | 22(20) | 18 | 8 patients with IVR, 16 with IVB, and 3 with IAI | 3 | Improved mean BCVA of 20/200 to 20/100 1 eye had decreased BCVA, 5 eyes had no change, and 11 eyes had ≥ 10 letters improvement | # | + |
| Baz, 2017 [ | Case series, IV | 10(10) | 55 ± 16 | 1.25 mg IVB; injection, then re-injection if persistent leakage or decreased BCVA | 1.7 ± 1.0 | *Improved BCVA from 0.62 ± 0.35 logMAR at baseline to 0.54 ± 0.35 logMAR at final visit ( | Improved mean CMT of 251 ± 25–239 ± 39 µm ( All cases had retinal fluid, which resolved at the final exam | ++ |
CMT central macular thickness, FA fluorescein angiography, F/U follow-up, IAI intravitreal aflibercept injection, IVB intravitreal bevacizumab, IVR intravitreal ranibizumab, No. mean number of injections, OCT optical coherent tomography, TPT temporal parafoveal thickness, BCVA best corrected visual acuity, # Just an abstract was available
Fig. 2MacTel proliferative phase treated with Anti-VEGF. The same patient mentioned in Fig. 1c, d with active choroidal neovascularization and visual acuity of 20/200 underwent 3 monthly doses of intravitreal bevacizumab (a). After 3 months, most of the fluid was resolved with visual acuity improvement to 60/200 (b). Images courtesy of Dr. Hamid Riazi