Clinical record
Age-related macular degeneration affects about one-third of people aged over 75 years.1 Of those with AMD, 10%–15% develop the neovascular (“wet”) form,2 characterised by abnormal new blood vessel formation in the choroid, under the retina. These abnormal vascular membranes are prone to rupture, leading to subretinal bleeding, fibrous scar formation and severe visual loss.
Many older patients who have AMD also take medications that can exacerbate or promote bleeding, such as anticoagulants or antiplatelet agents. In rare cases, intraocular bleeding — in the form of subretinal, suprachoroidal, or vitreous haemorrhage — can be catastrophic and blinding. Previous reports link systemic anticoagulation therapy to intraocular haemorrhage and blindness in AMD patients,3-7 including a recent report in this Journal.8 In two of these reports, patients taking warfarin had very high INRs (4.1 in one case;3 6.3 in the other4).
Other reports link systemic anticoagulation therapy to spontaneous suprachoroidal haemorrhage, even in the absence of neovascular AMD.9-11 Additionally, patients with neovascular AMD can develop massive submacular haemorrhage, even if they are not taking antiplatelet or anticoagulant agents. Unfortunately, as many patients with AMD have one eye with poor visual acuity due to macular scarring, it is all the more catastrophic when a massive haemorrhage leads to blindness in their “good” eye.
It has been previously noted that if a patient has only one functioning eye, the patient’s general practitioner or cardiologist should seek an ophthalmologist’s opinion to assess the risk of neovascular AMD in the seeing eye before, or soon after, commencing warfarin.12 Further, ophthalmologists should ask their patients whether they take warfarin, and should communicate to the treating doctor whether a patient has, or is at high risk of developing, neovascular AMD.12
Patients taking warfarin who develop neovascular AMD should be advised to maintain an INR at the lower end of the recommended range.3 In addition, we recommend that it would be prudent for INR monitoring to be at the more frequent end of the spectrum.
Lessons from practice
Patients taking warfarin who develop neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD) should maintain an international normalised ratio (INR) at the lower end of the recommended range.
INR monitoring should be more frequent for patients with neovascular AMD.
If a patient has only one functioning eye, an ophthalmologist should assess the risk of developing neovascular AMD in the seeing eye before, or soon after, commencing warfarin or an antiplatelet agent, including aspirin.
Ophthalmologists should ask all patients whether they take warfarin, and should communicate to the treating doctor whether this patient has, or is at high risk of developing, neovascular AMD.
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- 3. Ung T, James M, Gray RH. Long term warfarin associated with bilateral blindness in a patient with atrial fibrillation and macular degeneration. Heart 2003; 89: 985.
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- 8. Chalasani R, Qureshi S. Anticoagulation and intraocular haemorrhage in age-related macular degeneration: a probable link? Med J Aust 2010; 192: 228-229. <MJA full text>
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- 11. Wong JS. Spontaneous suprachoroidal hemorrhage in a patient receiving low-molecular-weight heparin (fraxiparine) therapy. Aust N Z J Ophthalmol 1999; 27: 433-434.
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None identified.