Integrated care combining antiangiogenic bridging and ischemia-directed therapies supports long-term success in neovascular glaucoma management
This narrative review examines management strategies for neovascular glaucoma. The condition originates from retinal ischemia, which elevates intraocular VEGF and other proangiogenic and inflammatory mediators, inducing rubeosis iridis and fibrovascular membrane formation at the angle. The review discusses interventions including intravitreal anti-VEGF injections, panretinal photocoagulation (PRP), antiangiogenic bridging, and ischemia-directed therapies. These approaches aim to achieve rapid regression of neovascularization. The authors do not report specific adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability data. The review does not report a sample size or follow-up duration. Funding or conflicts of interest are not reported. The authors note that long-term success requires integrated, individualized care that couples antiangiogenic bridging, durable management of retinal ischemia, and optimized surgical strategies. This review does not provide pooled effect sizes or statistical comparisons. Clinical application should consider the need for a comprehensive approach rather than isolated interventions.