Abstract

Background: Conbercept is a new anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) drug. Here, we systematically conducted the efficacy, safety, compliance, and pharmacoeconomic evaluation of intravitreal conbercept (IVC) compared with other treatments in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD), diabetic macular edema (DME), or pathologic myopia choroidal neovascularization (pmCNV). Methods: Databases of PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, ClinicalTrials.gov, SinoMed, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, and WanFang Data were systematically searched from the inception to July 27, 2021. Randomized clinical trials and pharmacoeconomic studies comparing IVC with control groups in adults with nAMD, DME, or pmCNV were reviewed and selected. Meta-analyses were performed using the fixed-effects model when pooled data were homogeneous. Heterogeneous data were analyzed using the random-effects model. Primary outcomes included visual improvement rate, mean change in visual acuity or best corrected visual acuity, and pharmacoeconomic outcomes. Additional outcomes were the mean change in fundus examination values, adverse events (AEs), quality-of-life measures, and number of injections. Results: Among 3,591 screened articles, 22 original studies with 1,910 eyes of patients were finally included. For nAMD and DME, IVC was significantly associated with better visual acuity or best corrected visual acuity improvement and fundus quantitative measures than placebo, laser photocoagulation (LP), or intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide (IVT). However, IVC showed non-inferior efficacy to intravitreal ranibizumab (IVR) according to low quality of evidence, and there was lack of trials comparing the priority of IVC to other anti-VEGF regimens. No definitive increased risk of ocular or non-ocular AEs were observed in the study groups. All patients with AEs recovered after symptomatic treatments, and no severe AEs occurred. Patients treated with IVC might have higher quality-of-life scores than those in IVR in nAMD or LP in DME. Additionally, IVC showed cost–utility advantages in nAMD and cost-effectiveness advantages than IVR in pmCNV in China. Conclusion: IVC is well-tolerated and effective for improving vision acuity and quantitative measures in fundus condition in patients with nAMD and DME compared with LP, IVT, and placebo, but gains comparable efficacy to IVR. However, well-designed, large-sample, and long-term evaluation of IVC shall be conducted in additional studies worldwide.

Highlights

  • Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a degenerative disease of the macular region of the retina and has become a leading cause of severe irreversible vision impairment in people over 40 years worldwide

  • Compliance Two trials (Du et al, 2016; Ma et al, 2019) reported the compliance to the use of intravitreal conbercept (IVC) by the QOL questionnaire, and the results demonstrated that higher QOL scores in self-care ability, activity ability, interpersonal relationship, psychology, and physiology domains were achieved in patients with IVC treatment compared with those under intravitreal ranibizumab (IVR) in neovascular AMD (nAMD) (Ma et al, 2019) or laser photocoagulation (LP) in Diabetic macular edema (DME) (Du et al, 2016)

  • We found that patients with nAMD or visual impairment due to DME receiving IVC achieved better improvement in visual acuity (VA) and quantitative measures than those under placebo, intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide (IVT), LP treatments, and gained comparable efficacy to IVR

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Summary

Introduction

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a degenerative disease of the macular region of the retina and has become a leading cause of severe irreversible vision impairment in people over 40 years worldwide. Neovascular AMD (nAMD) accounts for the minority of confirmed cases, it is the main cause of severe central vision loss (Gottlieb, 2002). Pathologic myopia, with the complications of choroidal neovascularization development (pmCNV), is a leading cause of visual impairment (Ohno-Matsui et al, 2018). With the global aging and the increased prevalence of diabetes, nAMD, DME, and pmCNV have become severe global health issues with substantial socioeconomic implications. We systematically conducted the efficacy, safety, compliance, and pharmacoeconomic evaluation of intravitreal conbercept (IVC) compared with other treatments in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD), diabetic macular edema (DME), or pathologic myopia choroidal neovascularization (pmCNV)

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