Association of plasma metabolites with treatment response after intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor injections in treatment-naïve neovascular age-related macular degeneration.
Hae Min Kang, Kevin M Mendez, Inês Laíns, Krupa Sourirajan, Roshni Bhat, Archana Nigalye, Raviv Katz, Georgiy Kozak, Hanna Choi, Augustine Bannerman, Rodrigo A Alvarez, David Wu, Ivana K Kim, Liming Liang, John B Miller, Demetrios G Vavvas, Joan W Miller, Jessica Lasky-Su, Deeba Husain
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background/aims: To investigate the association between plasma metabolomic profiles and treatment response after intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) injections in treatment-naïve neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD).
Methods: This is part of a prospective longitudinal study that included patients with treatment-naïve nAMD who have undergone three loading intravitreal anti-VEGF injections. All patients underwent ophthalmological examinations including spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD OCT). Fasting blood samples were collected at the time of study enrolment (not to first anti-VEGF injection) and metabolomic profiling was conducted using ultra-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Treatment response was defined as no evidence of any subretinal and intraretinal fluid on SD OCT 4-6 weeks after the third injection. Multilevel mixed-effects linear modelling was used to assess associations between plasma metabolites and treatment response. Multiple comparisons were accounted for using the effective number of tests to explain 80% of the variance (ENT80), with a p value threshold of 0.0017.
Results: We included 131 eyes of 101 patients, and 69 patients (68.3%) were female. 51 eyes (38.9%) were treatment responders. Taurodeoxycholate (TDCA) was the only plasma metabolite significantly associated with treatment response (β=1.6, ENT80=0.001).
Conclusion: In our study, TDCA was the most significant plasma metabolite associated with treatment response after three-loading dose of anti-VEGF therapy in patients with nAMD. Bile acids may have a beneficial impact on treatment response in nAMD through their neuroprotective property. Plasma metabolites may be used as biomarkers to predict responses to initial anti-VEGF therapy in patients with nAMD, providing a more individualised treatment plan.