Treatments are available that may help slow disease progression and preserve existing vision. If started early enough, treatment may recover some lost vision.
Medications
Some medicines, called anti-VEGF drugs, may help stop the growth of new blood vessels. These medicines block the effects of growth signals the body sends to generate new blood vessels. They are considered the first line treatment for all stages of wet macular degeneration.
Medicines used to treat wet macular degeneration include:
- Bevacizumab (Avastin).
- Ranibizumab (Lucentis).
- Aflibercept (Eylea).
- Brolucizumab (Beovu).
- Faricimab-svoa (Vabysmo)
Your eye doctor injects these medicines into the affected eye. You may need shots every 4 to 6 weeks to maintain the beneficial effect of the medicine. In some instances, you may partially recover vision as the blood vessels shrink and your body absorbs the fluid under the retina.
Possible risks of eye shots include:
- Conjunctival hemorrhage.
- Increased eye pressure.
- Infection.
- Retinal detachment.
- Eye inflammation.
Therapies
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Photodynamic therapy. This procedure is a possible treatment for the irregular blood vessel growth in wet macular degeneration. However, it is much less common than treatment with anti-VEGF shots.
During photodynamic therapy, your eye doctor injects a medicine called verteporfin (Visudyne) into a vein in your arm. The medicine then travels to blood vessels in your eye. Your eye doctor shines a focused light from a special laser on the problem blood vessels in your eye. This activates the verteporfin, causing the problem blood vessels to close. This stops the leakage.
Photodynamic therapy may improve your vision and reduce the rate of vision loss. You may need repeated treatments over time, as the treated blood vessels may reopen.
After photodynamic therapy, you'll need to avoid direct sunlight and bright lights until the drug has cleared your body. This may take a few days.
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Photocoagulation. During photocoagulation therapy, your eye doctor uses a high-energy laser beam to seal problem blood vessels under the macula. This procedure helps stop the vessels from bleeding, with the aim of minimizing further damage to the macula. Even with this treatment, blood vessels may regrow, requiring further treatment. The laser also can cause scarring that creates a blind spot.
Few people who have wet macular degeneration get this treatment. It generally isn't an option if you have problem blood vessels directly under the center of the macula. Also, the more damaged your macula is, the lower the likelihood of success.
- Low vision rehabilitation. Age-related macular degeneration doesn't affect your side vision and doesn't cause total blindness. But it can reduce or eliminate your central vision, which is necessary for reading, driving and recognizing people's faces. It may help for you to get care from a low vision rehabilitation specialist, an occupational therapist, your eye doctor and others trained in low vision rehabilitation. They can help you find ways to adapt to your changing vision.