Ophthalmology
Volume 111, Issue 11 , Pages 2007-2014.e1, November 2004

Surgery for hemorrhagic choroidal neovascular lesions of age-related macular degeneration: Quality-of-life findings:

SST report no. 14

  • Submacular Surgery Trials (SST) Research Group*

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to Ashley L. Childs, MS, SST Coordinating Center, 550 North Broadway, 9th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21205
    • Members of the Group who contributed data for the patients enrolled in this clinical trial can be found using Ref.8 Members of the Writing Committee for this report who take responsibility for its content on behalf of the SST Research Group are listed at the end of the text. Documentation of approval of the manuscript submitted for publication by all individuals listed is on file at the SST Coordinating Center, Baltimore, Maryland.

Received 21 May 2004; accepted 23 July 2004. published online 13 October 2004.

Purpose

To present and compare findings from health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL) interviews conducted with patients enrolled in the SST Group B Trial evaluating surgical removal of subfoveal choroidal neovascular lesions associated with age-related macular degeneration versus observation.

Design

Randomized clinical trial.

Participants

Eligible patients had predominantly hemorrhagic subfoveal choroidal neovascular lesions (total lesion size of >3.5 disc areas, area of blood at least 50% of the lesion area, and at least 75% of blood posterior to the equator) and best-corrected visual acuity (VA) of 20/100 to <20/1600 but at least light perception in the study eye. Three hundred thirty-six patients enrolled after baseline quality-of-life interviews, 168 assigned to each of surgery or observation.

Methods

Clinical and HRQOL data were collected before randomization and at 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 months after enrollment. Baseline clinical evidence was used to stratify patients as having unilateral or bilateral neovascularization at the time of randomization. The HRQOL interviews included the National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire (NEI-VFQ), the 36-item Short Form Health Survey, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.

Main outcomes measure

Two-year change in NEI-VFQ.

Results

At 24 months after enrollment, overall NEI-VFQ scores had a median decrease of 1 point from baseline in the observation arm (95% confidence interval [CI]: −4 to 3 points) and no change in the surgery arm (95% CI: −3 to 3 points) (P = 0.70). Changes from baseline on NEI-VFQ subscales also were similar between treatment arms. Differences in scores by unilateral or bilateral involvement seen at baseline in each treatment arm persisted throughout follow-up for most outcomes. Planned analyses stratified by VA showed trends (P = 0.17) in favor of surgery at 24 months in the patients with baseline VA greater than 20/200 for the NEI-VFQ scale (3.5-point median increase from baseline in the surgery arm [95% CI: −4 to 7] vs. a 1-point median loss from baseline in the observation arm [95% CI: −6 to 4]).

Conclusions

No difference was detected with respect to vision-targeted quality-of-life outcomes for patients randomized to surgery or observation in the SST Group B Trial.

This article contains additional online-only material available at http://www.ophsource.com/periodicals/ophtha.

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 Manuscript no. 240389.

 The SST are sponsored by the National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Bethesda, Maryland (cooperative agreements U10 EY11547, EY11557, EY11558 with Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland). Participating clinical centers were supported by contracts with Johns Hopkins University.Pertinent financial interests are summarized in a companion article.8

 E-mail: achilds1@jhmi.edu.

PII: S0161-6420(04)01266-7

doi:10.1016/j.ophtha.2004.07.024

Ophthalmology
Volume 111, Issue 11 , Pages 2007-2014.e1, November 2004