To prospectively evaluate the outcomes of different subtypes of neovascular age-related macular degeneration during intravitreal aflibercept monotherapy.
Forty-four eyes of 44 patients with treatment-naïve polypoidal choroidal vasculopathy (PCV, n = 12), hemorrhagic choroidal neovascularization (hCNV, n = 12), pigment epithelium detachment (PED, n = 11), or retinal angiomatous proliferation (RAP, n = 9) were included and followed for 12 months. All patients received intravitreal aflibercept monotherapy.
Mean visual acuity at baseline in PCV was 67 ± 16 Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study letters (20/50 Snellen equivalent), in hCNV 55 ± 21 (20/80), in RAP lesions 64 ± 11 (20/50), and in PED 74 ± 7 (20/32). At Month 12, visual acuity in PCV was 66 ± 16 (20/50), in hCNV 69 ± 17 (20/40), in RAP 68 ± 12 (20/50), and in PED 69 ± 18 (20/40). At the 12-month follow-up, visual acuity improved or was stable (±5 letters from baseline) in 84% of eyes (37/44 patients), with hCNV showing the greatest mean visual acuity gain. Mean central retinal thickness in patients with PCV was 523 ± 251 µm, in hCNV 497 ± 171, in RAP lesions 573 ± 132, and in PED 541 ± 158 and decreased to 310 ± 91 µm in PCV, 323 ± 75 µm in hCNV, 357 ± 173 µm in RAP lesions, and 422 ± 150 µm in PED. The mean area of atrophy increased from 2.0 ± 3.6 mm at baseline to 4.6 ± 8.6 mm at Month 12 (mean difference [95% confidence interval] -0.8 [-8.5 to 7.0], P = 0.8), with the greatest atrophy in patients with PED at Month 12.
All subtypes of neovascular age-related macular degeneration showed anatomical improvement and stabilization of visual function during intravitreal treatment.

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