Abstract

To compare retinal vascularization progression rate, final retinal vascularization, and fluorescein angiography (FA) findings in infants who received intravitreal bevacizumab (IVB) treatment in one eye and with spontaneous regression in the other eye. Thirty eyes of 15 infants who underwent IVB in one eye due to asymmetric retinopathy of prematurity, and who had pre-treatment fundus photographs and fluorescein angiography images were included in the study. Horizontal disc diameter (DD), optic disc-to-fovea distance (FD), and the length of temporal retinal vascularization (LTRV) distance were measured by evaluating pre-treatment and FA images. The mean ages at the time of treatment and FA were 40.38 ± 3.35 and 68.72 ± 10.52 weeks postmenstrual age, respectively. The pre-treatment LTRV/FD ratio was 3.11 ± 0.41 in the treated eyes and 3.26 ± 0.43 in the non-treated eyes (p = 0.053). The final LTRV/FD ratio was 4.23 ± 0.38 in the treated group and 4.33 ± 0.37 in the non-treated group (p = 0.286). Staining of the vessels, hyperfluorescent focus, and irregular branching of the vessels were similar between the groups, respectively (p = 1.000; p = 0.250; p = 0.625). The progression rate of retinal vascularization and angiographic findings were similar between the treated eyes and the non-treated eyes. Our study suggests that incomplete retinal vascularization in eyes treated with anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is due to the nature of the disease, and anti-VEGF treatment was not to cause cessation in vascular progression.

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