| Literature DB >> 30926932 |
Richard P Gale1,2, Sajjad Mahmood3,4, Helen Devonport3,5, Praveen J Patel3,6, Adam H Ross3,7, Gavin Walters3,8, Louise Downey3,9, Samer El-Sherbiny3,10, Mary Freeman3,11, Simon Berry3,12, Nitin Jain3,13.
Abstract
This report by a group of UK retina specialists and health professionals considers best practice recommendations for the management of sight-threatening neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD), based on collective experience and expertise in routine clinical practice. The authors provide an update for ophthalmologists, allied healthcare professionals and commissioners on practice principles for optimal patient care and service provision standards. Refinement of care pathways for nAMD has improved access to intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor therapy but there are still variations in care and reported outcomes between clinic centres. Innovative organisational models of service provision allow providers to better match capacity with increasing demand. The authors review the recent NICE guideline for diagnosis and management of AMD, considerations for switching therapies and stopping treatment and need for regular monitoring of non-affected fellow eyes in patients with unilateral nAMD. Actions for delivery of high-quality care and to improve long-term patient outcomes are discussed. Local pathways need to detail nAMD target time to treat, maintenance of review intervals to ensure proactive treatment regimens are delivered on time and appropriate discharge for patients deemed low risk or no longer benefiting from treatment. Actual visual acuity outcomes achieved and maintenance of the level of vision when disease stability is achieved are considered good measures for judging the quality of care in the treatment of patients with nAMD. Robust community referral pathways must be in place for suspected reactivation of choroidal neovascularisation and rapid referral for second eye involvement. Practical considerations for intravitreal injection therapy are outlined.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30926932 PMCID: PMC6474281 DOI: 10.1038/s41433-018-0300-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye (Lond) ISSN: 0950-222X Impact factor: 3.775
Fig. 1Estimated annual incidence of nAMD per 1000 in the UK population aged ≥50 years. Data from Owen et al. (Web Table 2) [10]. Available at: http://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/1994/1/bjophthalmol-2011-301109-s3.pdf
Fig. 2Estimated annual number of new cases of nAMD (‘000s) in the UK population aged ≥50 years. Data from Owen et al. (Web Table 2) [10]. Available at: http://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/1994/1/bjophthalmol%2D2011%2D301109%2Ds3.pdf
Action on nAMD service provision: key points
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| ° Maintain high-quality service provision standards without compromise for target time to treat, maintenance of review intervals for timely proactive treatment and appropriate discharge. |
| ° Ensure continuing proactive treatment strategies to maximise and maintain vision benefits. |
| ° Monitor and benchmark treatment outcomes, attendance compliance and discharge rates in the context of service slippage. |
| ° Ensure dedicated ophthalmic IT and failsafe administration support. |
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| ° Service providers are encouraged to establish a service model best suited to local circumstances and patient population but which allows patients with nAMD to receive timely and effective treatment with optimal follow-up. |
| ° An efficient MDT with upskilled AHPs helps optimise available consultant resource. |
| ° Examples of good practice and service development include clinical assessments and evaluation of images undertaken by trained AHPs under the supervision of a retinal specialist with expertise in managing nAMD, non-medical healthcare professional-led intravitreal injection services and follow-up clinics in the community for surveillance of treated nAMD patients with quiescent disease. |
| ° Consultation based on SD-OCT images acquired either by community optometrists or AHPs within the HES may help to triage individuals with suspected macular disease and provide faster access to treatment for urgent cases. |
| ° Fast and secure IT links are necessary. |
| ° For nAMD patients with quiescent disease following anti-VEGF treatment, consider the feasibility of utilising community-based optometrists to make decisions about the need for hospital assessment and treatment, subject to ongoing training and consultant-led governance. |
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| ° NICE technology appraisal recommendations must normally be implemented by the NHS within 90 days of the date of publication of final guidance, unless otherwise specified. By contrast, it is not mandatory to apply the recommendations in NICE guideline NG82. |
| ° NICE does not recommend the routine use of ICGA as part of the diagnostic and therapeutic processes, but acknowledges that it is considered particularly useful for identifying PCV, a subtype of nAMD. |
| ° There is an opportunity to seek commissioning support for antiangiogenic treatment of nAMD patients with starting vision better than 6/12 or if vision is worse than 6/96 in a second eye. |
| ° There may be a role for adjunctive PDT in individual nAMD cases, while laser may be a potential treatment option for extrafoveal CNV lesions. |
| ° Effective low-vision support services are necessary as part of routine care and all medical retina units should have access to LVA services. |
| ° Centres should seek funding for an ECLO service where absent. |
AHPs allied healthcare professionals, anti-VEGF anti-vascular endothelial growth factor, CNV choroidal neovascularisation, ECLO Eye Clinic Liaison Officer, LVA low-vision aid, HES hospital eye service, MDT multidisciplinary team, ICGA indocyanine green angiography, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, PCV polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy, PDT photodynamic therapy, SD-OCT spectral domain optical coherence tomography
Action on nAMD clinical management: key points
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| ° Treatment switch to a different anti-VEGF drug may be beneficial in a subset of nAMD patients who have no improvement in vision and no improvement in fluid or pigment epithelial detachment following prior antiangiogenic treatment. |
| ° Decisions to withhold or stop anti-VEGF treatment need to be patient-centred and tailored to the needs of individual patients. |
| ° Discharge from clinic may be considered if there are robust community referral systems in place. |
| ° A structured monitoring programme for specific cohorts of inactive nAMD patients (e.g., better-seeing eyes) meeting local criteria for discharge merits consideration. |
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| ° There is a high burden of second eye involvement in patients receiving treatment for unilateral nAMD and regular monitoring of non-affected fellow eyes is necessary. |
| ° Unilateral nAMD patients extended beyond 8-weekly retreatment might benefit from OCT monitoring at shorter intervals to prevent worse outcomes in the second eye. |
| ° Home monitoring and regular eye tests can help identify subtle changes in visual function that may suggest increasing nAMD activity. |
| ° Fellow eye involvement may be considered when determining an appropriate monitoring interval. |
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| ° The use of peri-injection antibiotics is no longer recommended; however, practitioners should adhere to local protocol until changed. |
| ° Topical administration of iopidine 1% (in cases known to have IOP spikes post injection) 1 h prior to intravitreal anti-VEGF injection can help reduce the magnitude of a rise in IOP post injection. |
| ° For injection clinics led by AHPs, there should be an appropriately trained clinician available to manage any urgent ophthalmological or medical complication. |
| ° Bilateral intravitreal injections during the same visit must be performed as separate sequential procedures. |
| ° Follow-up injection visits should be coordinated by a failsafe administrator to ensure that all patients receive appointments and retreatments at the appropriate time without undue deferral. |
AHPs allied healthcare professionals, anti-VEGF anti-vascular endothelial growth factor, IOP intraocular pressure, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, OCT optical coherence tomography
NHS-funded outpatient activity in England 2016-17: top five treatment specialties with the greatest number of attendances [22]
| Treatment specialty | Attendances | Non-attendances (DNAs) | Ratio of non-attendances to attendances |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trauma and orthopaedics | 7,779,904 | 607,881 | 0.08 |
| Ophthalmology | 7,642,363 | 651,106 | 0.09 |
| Physiotherapy | 5,058,780 | 490,276 | 0.10 |
| Diagnostic imaging | 4,048,842 | 49,277 | 0.01 |
| Obstetrics | 3,722,720 | 277,859 | 0.07 |
| Top five treatment specialties | 28,252,609 | 2,076,399 | 0.07 |
| All treatment specialties | 93,944,301 | 7,938,009 | 0.08 |
See ref. [22]. © Copyright © 2017, NHS Digital (Health and Social Care Information Centre)
Information from NHS Digital, licenced under the current version of the Open Government Licence. https://digital.nhs.uk/catalogue/PUB30154
Practical steps or actions for service improvement in the management of nAMD
| Options and practical steps for service improvements in the management of nAMD include, but are not limited to: |
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| ▪ Direct electronic referral for suspected nAMD can facilitate rapid access to clinical assessment and imaging and needs to be managed as direct appointment bookings to ensure allocation to the correct clinic. |
| ▪ Trained non-medical AHPs may help triage new patient referrals to fast-track prompt treatment or discharge decision making. |
| ▪ Virtual (without actual consultation) clinic models may be provided in the HES or at peripheral sites, with decisions about treatment made by the consultant at a virtual reporting session or by non-medical AHPs directly. Training, audit and governance must be appropriate. |
| ▪ Decentralised image acquisition for nAMD virtual clinics where community OCT and cameras are already available and IT data transfer systems are available. |
| ▪ Eye departments have successfully implemented AHP-led anti-VEGF injection clinics. |
| ▪ Risk stratification of patients who are no longer receiving active treatment may allow graded discharge options. |
AHPs allied healthcare professionals, anti-VEGF anti-vascular endothelial growth factor, HES hospital eye service, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, OCT optical coherence tomography
Fig. 3Flow diagram showing Emergency Macular Clinic (EMAC) service pathway, Manchester Royal Eye Hospital. AMD age-related macular degeneration, BRVO branch retinal vein occlusion, CNV choroidal neovascularisation, CRVO central retinal vein occlusion, CSR central serous retinopathy, CSW care support worker, DMO diabetic macular oedema, ERM epiretinal membrane, OCT optical coherence tomography, RVO retinal vein occlusion, VMT vitreomacular traction. Information within flowchart courtesy of Mr Sajjad Mahmood, Manchester Royal Eye Hospital, Manchester, UK
Fig. 4Pathway for nurse-led stable nAMD service reviewing ~40 patients per clinic session, Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, UK. IOP intraocular pressure, logMAR logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, OCT optical coherence tomography, VA visual acuity. Information within flowchart courtesy of Mr Praveen Patel, Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, UK
Brief overview of NICE advice for management of neovascular age-related macular degeneration [12]
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| ° Patients should be advised to self-monitor their AMD, consult their primary eye care professional if their vision changes or new symptoms emerge (e.g., blurred or grey patch in their vision, straight lines appearing distorted or objects appearing smaller than normal) and continue to attend routine sight-tests with their community optometrist; and |
| ° A clear local pathway should be agreed covering ongoing management and re-referral when necessary following discharge to primary care. |
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Anti-VEGF anti-vascular endothelial growth factor, FFA fundus fluorescein angiography, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, OCT optical coherence tomography, PDT photodynamic therapy, VA visual acuity
aAvailable at: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg91
bAvailable at: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng56
See ref. [12]. NICE © 2018. All rights reserved. Subject to Notice of rights (https://www.nice.org.uk/terms-and-conditions#notice-of-rights)
NICE guidance is prepared for the National Health Service in England. All NICE guidance is subject to regular review and may be updated or withdrawn. NICE accepts no responsibility for the use of its content in this product/publication.
Classification of active and inactive nAMD, NICE 2018 guideline for diagnosis and management of AMD [12]
| nAMD classification | Definition |
|---|---|
| Late AMD (wet active) | ▪ Classic CNV |
| ▪ Occult (fibrovascular PED and serous PED with neovascularisation) | |
| ▪ Mixed (predominantly or minimally classic CNV with occult CNV) | |
| ▪ RAP | |
| ▪ PCV | |
| Late AMD (wet inactive) | ▪ Fibrous scar |
| ▪ Sub-foveal atrophy or fibrosis secondary to a RPE tear | |
| ▪ Atrophy (absence or thinning of RPE and/or retina) | |
| ▪ Cystic degeneration (persistent intraretinal fluid or tubulations unresponsive to treatment) | |
| NB Eyes classified as wet inactive may still develop or have a recurrence of wet active AMD |
See ref. [12]. NICE © 2018. All rights reserved. Subject to Notice of rights
AMD age-related macular degeneration, CNV choroidal neovascularisation, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, PCV polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy, PED pigment epithelial detachment, RAP retinal angiomatous proliferation, RPE retinal pigment epithelium
Risk factors for AMD [12]
| ▪ Older age |
| ▪ Presence of AMD in the other eye |
| ▪ Family history of AMD |
| ▪ Smoking |
| ▪ Hypertension |
| ▪ BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 |
| ▪ Diet low in omega 3 and 6, vitamins, carotenoid and minerals |
| ▪ Diet high in fat |
| ▪ Lack of exercise |
See ref. [12]. NICE © 2018. All rights reserved. Subject to Notice of rights
AMD age-related macular degeneration, BMI body mass index
UK AMD EMR Users Group: multicentre results evaluating effect of extended follow-up for unilateral nAMD on VA of second initially unaffected eyes at the time of diagnosis of nAMD in the contralateral eye [83]
| OCT review interval for unilateral nAMD | Risk of losing ≥3 lines of VA in second eye (between pre-diagnosis and diagnosis) | |
|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | ||
| Sudden presentationa | – | – |
| ≤4 Weeks | 1.32 (0.82, 2.06) | 0.24 |
| >4 To ≤8 weeks | 1.61 (1.23, 2.10) | <0.001 |
| >8 To ≤12 weeks | 2.25 (1.50, 3.32) | <0.001 |
| >12 Weeks | 3.47 (2.21, 5.37) | <0.001 |
Adapted from Burton et al. [83] and reproduced with permission
CI confidence interval, nAMD neovascular age-related macular degeneration, OCT optical coherence tomography, OR odds ratio, VA visual acuity
aSudden presentation group refers to those patients seen earlier than their anticipated follow-up interval when the second eye was diagnosed, presumed to have presented early due to worsening visual symptoms in the second eye