2Gazi University Faculty of Medicine, Ophthalmology, Ankara, Turkey
3University of Health Sciences Başakşehir Çam and Sakura City Hospital, Ophthalmology, İstanbul, Turkey DOI : 10.37845/ret.vit.2025.34.41 Objective: To evaluate long-term visual and anatomical outcomes in eyes with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) that responded favorably to initial anti-VEGF loading therapy.
Materials and Methods: This retrospective study included 55 eyes of 55 patients with at least 12 months of follow-up. Early good responders (EGR) were defined as those who showed ?5 letter gain in BCVA, complete resolution of intraretinal/subretinal fluid, reduction in lesion size, and disappearance of subretinal hemorrhage after three loading injections. Retreatments were guided by visual decline, fluid on OCT, or persistent/new hemorrhage.
Results: The mean baseline BCVA improved from 51.1 ± 22.6 letters to 63.9 ± 21.5 after loading and was 58.5 ± 23.1 at the end of year-5 (p<0.001 and p=0.003 vs. baseline). Although BCVA decreased between month 3 and year 1 (p=0.009), it remained stable thereafter. Central foveal thickness decreased significantly from 327.9 ± 166.9 ?m to 195.3 ± 97.1 ?m post-loading and to 175.7 ± 59.6 ?m at final visit (p<0.001). The mean annual number of injections declined from 5.1 in year 1 to 2.4 in year 5. Visual decline after loading was seen in 51% of eyes, mostly due to lesion activity (57%) or atrophy (43%). Notably, 27.2% of eyes required no further injections after the loading phase during the first year. No cases of tachyphylaxis or treatment switch were observed.
Conclusions: EGR patients with nAMD can sustain functional and anatomical improvements over 5 years with significantly fewer injections. A substantial subset may require minimal or no additional treatment following initial therapy.
Keywords : Age-related macular degeneration, neovascular AMD, Anti-VEGF, early good responders, long-term results


