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  • Efficiency and safety of subconjunctival injection of anti-VEGF agent - bevacizumab - in treating dry eye.

Efficiency and safety of subconjunctival injection of anti-VEGF agent - bevacizumab - in treating dry eye.

Drug design, development and therapy (2015-06-26)
Xiaodan Jiang, Huibin Lv, Weiqiang Qiu, Ziyuan Liu, Xuemin Li, Wei Wang
ABSTRACT

Dry eye is a chronic inflammatory ocular surface disease with high prevalence. The current therapies for dry eye remain to be unspecific and notcomprehensive. This study aims to explore safety and efficacy of a novel treatment - subconjunctival injection of bevacizumab - in dry eye patients. Sixty-four eyes of 32 dry eye patients received subconjunctival injection of 100 μL 25 mg/mL bevacizumab. Dry eye symptoms, signs (corrected visual acuity, intraocular pressure, conjunctival vascularity, corneal staining, tear break-up time, Marx line score, and blood pressure), and conjunctival impression cytology were evaluated 3 days before and 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months after injection. Significant improvements were observed in dry eye symptoms, tear break-up time, and conjunctival vascularization area at all the visits after injection compared to the baseline (P<0.05). The density of the goblet cell increased significantly at 1 month and 3 months after injection (P<0.05). There was no visual and systemic threat observed in any patient. Subconjunctival injection of 100 μL 25 mg/mL bevacizumab is a safe and efficient treatment for ocular surface inflammation of dry eye disease.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Levofloxacin, 98.0-102.0% anhydrous basis (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Ofloxacin, fluoroquinolone antibiotic