| Literature DB >> 31693715 |
Samir N Patel1, Michael A Klufas1.
Abstract
Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a leading and preventable cause of childhood blindness worldwide. Although laser photocoagulation remains the gold standard for treatment, the off-label use of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) therapy to treat ROP, particularly posterior zone I disease, is increasing. Although initial studies on anti-VEGF therapy for ROP have focused on bevacizumab, recent studies have proposed that ranibizumab may be a safer and more effective alternative for use in this population. This review updates recent evidence regarding the use of ranibizumab in the management of ROP.Entities:
Keywords: Avastin; BEAT-ROP; Lucentis; RAINBOW; anti-VEGF; bevacizumab; ranibizumab; retinopathy of prematurity; vascular endothelial growth factor
Year: 2019 PMID: 31693715 PMCID: PMC6711562 DOI: 10.2147/EB.S189684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye Brain ISSN: 1179-2744
Differences in structure and function between ranibizumab and bevacizumab
| Ranibizumab | Bevacizumab | |
|---|---|---|
| Fab fragment | Full length antibody | |
| No | Yes | |
| No | Yes | |
| 48.39 kDa | 139 kDa | |
| 3 days | 17–21 days |
Figure 1Molecular structure of ranibizumab. The heavy chain of the antigen-binding fragment is in dark blue and the light chain is in light blue. Permission to use this figure was obtained from Genetech.
Comparative studies of ranibizumab for retinopathy of prematurity
| Study | Design | Participants | Intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wong et al, | Retrospective chart review | 6 infants (10 eyes) Zone I or posterior zone II ROP Duration: 9–16 months | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (4 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (6 eyes) | Recurrence rate: 5/6 (83%) eyes treated with ranibizumab at an interval of 5.9 weeks. No recurrence of ROP in eyes treated with bevacizumab |
| Lin et al, | Retrospective chart review | 21 infants (40 eyes) Type 1 ROP Duration: 1 year | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (25 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (15 eyes) | Complete vascularization in 15/25 (60%) eyes treated with ranibizumab vs 7/15 (47%) eyes treated with bevacizumab No difference in rates of axial length or spherical equivalent |
| Erol et al, | Retrospective chart review | 20 infants (36 eyes) Type 1 ROP Duration: 20 months | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (21 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (15 eyes) | Recurrence rate: 4/15 (27%) eyes treated with ranibizumab vs 2/21 (10%) eyes treated with bevacizumab |
| Chen et al, | Retrospective chart review | 37 infants (72 eyes) Type 1 ROP Duration: 1 year | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (41 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (31 eyes) | No recurrence of ROP in eyes treated with ranibizumab or bevacizumab No difference in mean refractive error between bevacizumab or ranibizumab |
| Alyamac et al, | Retrospective chart review | 45 infants (90 eyes) Type I ROP with zone I or posterior zone II disease Duration: 6–12 months | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (44 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (46 eyes) | No difference in time to mean vascularization between bevacizumab and ranibizumab Recurrence rate: 14/23 (61%) infants treated with ranibizumab at interval of 7.8 weeks vs 6/22 (10%) infants treated with bevacizumab at interval of 8.5 weeks Recurrence requiring further treatment: 2 (33%) bevacizumab, 2 (14%) ranibizumab |
| Kabatas et al, | Retrospective chart review | 54 infants (108 eyes) Type 1 ROP Duration: 18 months | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (24 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (12 eyes) Laser (72 eyes) | Recurrence rate: 2/12 (16%) eyes treated with ranibizumab at 48 weeks PMA vs 2/24 (8.3%) eyes treated with bevacizumab at 52 weeks PMA. No difference in refractive error between treatment groups |
| Gunay et al, | Retrospective interventional case series | 134 infants (264 eyes) Type 1 ROP and AP-ROP Duration: 17.6–23 months | Bevacizumab 0.625 mg (107 eyes) Ranibizumab 0.25 mg (44 eyes) Laser (113 eyes) | Complete resolution of neovascularization after single injection with bevacizumab and ranibizumab Recurrence rate: 11/22 (50%) infants treated with ranibizumab vs 3/55 (5.5%) infants treated with bevacizumab Mean time to recurrence: 8.8±1.5 weeks with ranibizumab compared to 14±2.7 weeks with bevacizumab Recurrence requiring further treatment: 3 (5.5%) bevacizumab, 3 (13.6%) ranibizumab, 0 (0%) laser. |
| Zhang et al, | Randomized Clinical trial | 100 eyes Type 1 ROP, zone II, stage 2 or 3+ Duration: 6 months | Ranibizumab 0.3 mg (50 eyes) Laser (50 eyes) | Recurrence rate: 26/50 (50%) eyes treated with ranibizumab vs 2/50 (4%) eyes treated with laser |
| Tong et al, | Retrospective chart review | 83 infants (160 eyes) APROP | Ranibizumab 0.3 mg (160 eyes) | Recurrence rate: 82/160 (51%) eyes. Progression to retinal detachment in 35/160 (22%) eyes |
| Feng et al, | Retrospective chart review | 331 infants (629 eyes) APROP, type 1 ROP, and type 1 prethreshold ROP | Ranibizumab 0.25 mg | Recurrence rate: 245/629 (39%) eyes. Mean time to recurrence: 8.57±3.73 weeks (range: 4–29 weeks) |
| Huang et al, | Retrospective chart review | 145 infants (283 eyes) Type I ROP | Ranibizumab 0.25 mg | Recurrence rate: 127/266 (45%) eyes that had initial response Mean time to recurrence: 8.3±2.7 weeks |
| Castellanos et al, | Prospective, non-randomized – Intervention case series | 3 infants (6 eyes) Type 1 ROP Duration: 3 years | Ranibizumab 0.25 mg | Complete resolution of neovascularization after single injection None developed unfavorable structural outcomes |
Figure 2Rates of retinopathy of prematurity recurrence after treatment with intravitreal ranibizumab versus bevacizumab. Among the different studies, rates of recurrence in patients receiving intravitreal ranibizumab (black) ranged from 16% to 83%, whereas rates of recurrence in patients receiving intravitreal bevacizumab (gray) ranged from 0% to 10%.