Abstract

TopicThis systematic review and meta-analysis investigates the efficacy and safety of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) injections compared to surgical intervention in improving visual acuity (VA) and reducing complications for patients with submacular hemorrhage (SMH) due to neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Clinical relevanceDetermining the optimal intervention for SMH in AMD is crucial for patient care. MethodsWe included studies on anti-VEGF injections or surgical interventions for SMH in AMD from 7 databases, searched up to May 2024. Data extraction and quality assessment were done by two independent reviewers. Certainty of evidence was assessed GRADE approach. Meta-analysis employed random-effects models. Primary outcomes were pooled mean logMAR VA difference (initial examination minus last follow-up VA) and adverse events rates. ResultsA total of 43 observational studies were included: 21 (960 eyes) on anti-VEGF and 22 (455 eyes) on surgery. Comparisons were made across separate studies due to lack of head-to-head studies. Meta-analysis included 11 anti-VEGF studies (444 eyes) and 12 surgical studies (195 eyes) for VA outcomes. The mean difference (MD) in VA was -0.16 (95%CI: -0.26,-0.07) for anti-VEGF and -0.36 (95%CI: -0.68,-0.04) for surgery, with no significant difference between groups (X2=1.70, df =1, p=0.19). Heterogeneity was high in surgical studies (I2=96.2%, tau2=0.23, p<0.01) and negligible in anti-VEGF studies (I2=7%, tau2=0.003, p=0.38). GRADE certainty was moderate for anti-VEGF and low for surgery. Anti-VEGF had lower rates of cataract (0% vs 4.6%), proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR, 0.1% vs 2.0%), and retinal detachment (RD, 0.1% vs 10.6%), but similar rates of recurrent hemorrhage (5.4% vs 5.3%). Complications were summarized descriptively due to zero cell problem. ConclusionBoth anti-VEGF and surgery treat SMH in AMD with similar VA outcomes but different safety profiles. Anti-VEGF is preferred for less severe hemorrhage, while surgery is suited for extensive hemorrhage. Despite uncertain comparative VA outcomes, treatment should be guided by clinical judgment and patient factors.

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