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Automated Perimetry
Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors
Intra Ocular Lens Power Calculation and Optic Biometry...
Visual Field Defects in Glaucoma
Visual Field Defect and Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Defect in a Case of Optic Nerve Head Drusen...
Current Minimal Invasive Angle Procedures Without Implants for the Treatment of Glaucoma...
Intra Ocular Lens Power Calculation and Optic Biometry...
Automated Perimetry
Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors
Visual Field Defect and Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Defect in a Case of Optic Nerve Head Drusen...
PureSee Kesintisiz Yüksek Kalitede Görüş
TJ-CEO 2025 , Vol 20 , Num 4
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The Expanding Role of Anti-VEGF Therapy in Glaucoma Surgery: A Narrative Review
Bilge Eraydin1, Nurşen Arıtürk1
Ondokuz Mayis University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Ophthalmology, Samsun, Türkiye DOI : 10.37844/TJ-CEO.2025.20.32 The use of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (anti-VEGF) agents in glaucoma surgery has emerged as a promising adjunctive strategy to improve surgical outcomes by modulating postoperative wound healing. Current data suggest that anti-VEGF therapy effectively reduces angiogenesis, bleb vascularity, and fibroblast proliferation, resulting in more widespread and avascular blebs and potentially providing better short-term intraocular pressure control. While studies are primarily focused on neovascular glaucoma, anti- VEGF agents also have the potential to modulate fibrosis in other glaucoma subtypes. Anti-VEGF agents such as bevacizumab, ranibizumab, aflibercept, and conbercept have been investigated as adjuvants to mitomycin-C (MMC) in the treatment of glaucoma filtration surgeries (GFS) and microinvasive bleb-forming surgery (MIBS). However, there is currently no established consensus regarding the optimal route and timing of anti-VEGF administration, and these remain active areas of ongoing research. This review summarizes the current evidence and clinical outcomes of anti-VEGF agents used in glaucoma surgery and provides an overview of their role in postoperative modulation of wound healing, routes of administration, and optimal timing. Keywords : Anti-VEGF, Glaucoma surgery, Wound healing, Fibrosis modulation
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