Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD)

Last reviewed:
February 19, 2026
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Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of irreversible vision loss in adults over 50, affecting nearly 20 million Americans. While there is no cure, effective treatments exist for every stage — from vitamins that slow progression, to newly approved therapies for advanced dry AMD, to injections that stabilize or improve vision in wet AMD — and early detection is the key to preserving sight. Our retina specialists at Retina Vision Consultants offer comprehensive AMD diagnosis, monitoring, and the full range of current treatments at our Beverly Hills office.

Sudden changes in your central vision may indicate “wet” AMD. If straight lines appear wavy, or you notice a new dark spot or rapid blurring in your central vision, contact us immediately at (310) 269-8565 for a same-day evaluation. Delays in treatment may result in irreversible vision loss.

In This Article

What Is Macular Degeneration?

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a progressive disease of the macula, the small central area of the retina responsible for sharp, detailed vision. The macula is what you use to read, drive, recognize faces, and see fine detail. When the macula is damaged by AMD, central vision gradually or suddenly deteriorates while peripheral (side) vision remains intact.

AMD affects approximately 19.8 million Americans and is the leading cause of irreversible blindness in adults over 50 in the developed world. It exists in two forms — “dry” and “wet” — which differ significantly in how they progress and how they are treated.

Types and Stages of AMD

“Dry” AMD (Non-neovascular AMD)

“Dry” AMD accounts for 85–90% of all cases. It develops when small yellow deposits called drusen accumulate beneath the retina and the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) — the support layer that nourishes the retina’s light-sensing cells — begins to thin. Dry AMD progresses through stages:

  • Early Dry AMD: Small drusen with no pigment changes. Usually no symptoms. The 5-year risk of progressing to late AMD is approximately 1%.
  • Intermediate Dry AMD: Large drusen or pigment changes in the macula. This is the pivotal stage — the 5-year progression risk rises to 12–40% depending on severity. AREDS2 vitamin supplementation, UV ocular protection, healthy lifestyle modifications, optimizing cardiovascular health and no smoking are recommended. Photobiomodulation (multi-spectral) light therapy is a new treatment that may further decrease the risk of progression.
  • Advanced Dry AMD (Geographic Atrophy): Areas of RPE and photoreceptor loss in the macula. Approximately 30% of patients with dry AMD progress to geographic atrophy. Vision loss is gradual but permanent and can result in central vision blind spots. Two FDA-approved treatments can now slow this progression. In addition, some patients may qualify for enrollment in stem cell clinical trials to replace the damaged RPE cells.

“Wet” AMD (Neovascular AMD)

Wet AMD accounts for 10–15% of cases but is responsible for approximately 90% of severe vision loss from AMD. It occurs when abnormal blood vessels grow beneath or within the retina (macular neovascularization). These vessels are fragile and leak fluid and blood, causing rapid damage to the macula — sometimes within weeks. If left untreated, these vessels can form scars that result in permanent, irreversible vision loss. Dry AMD can convert to wet AMD, which is why regular monitoring matters even when you have “only” the dry form.

Common Symptoms

In its earliest stages, AMD often has no noticeable symptoms. It is frequently discovered during a routine dilated eye exam. As the disease progresses, you may notice:

  • Subtle blurring or haziness in your central vision.
  • Increased need for bright light when reading.
  • Difficulty adjusting from bright to dim environments.
  • Colors appearing less vivid or washed out.
  • A blurry, gray, or dark area in the center of your vision (in geographic atrophy).

Symptoms that require immediate evaluation: Sudden onset of wavy or distorted lines (metamorphopsia), a new dark spot in your central vision, or rapid worsening of central vision over days. These symptoms may indicate that dry AMD has converted to wet AMD and requires same-day evaluation.

Home monitoring: If you have AMD, daily Amsler grid testing (a simple grid of straight lines) and other home surveillance tools can help detect early changes that may require treatment. We review these tools and instructions for use during your consultation.

Causes and Risk Factors

AMD develops through a combination of aging, genetics, and environmental factors. Drusen accumulate between the RPE and Bruch’s membrane, triggering chronic inflammation and oxidative stress that progressively damage the macula.

Non-modifiable risk factors:

  • Age: The dominant risk factor. AMD is rare before 55 and affects approximately 25% of adults over 75.
  • Genetics: Family history significantly increases risk. The strongest genetic associations are with the CFH and ARMS2/HTRA1 genes.
  • Race: AMD disproportionately affects White/European-ancestry populations. Black Americans have the lowest prevalence of late AMD.
  • Sex: Women have higher lifetime prevalence, partly due to longer lifespan.

Modifiable risk factors:

  • Smoking: The strongest modifiable risk factor. Current smokers are 2–4 times more likely to develop AMD.
  • Diet: A Mediterranean diet rich in leafy greens (lutein and zeaxanthin sources) is associated with lower AMD risk.
  • Cardiovascular health: Hypertension, obesity, and physical inactivity are associated with increased AMD risk.

How Is AMD Diagnosed?

AMD is an imaging-intensive disease. At Retina Vision Consultants, we use multiple complementary technologies to stage your condition, detect changes early, and guide treatment decisions.

  • Dilated Fundus Examination: Your retina specialist evaluates drusen size and distribution, pigment changes, signs of fluid or bleeding (wet AMD), and areas of atrophy.
  • Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT): The most important imaging tool in AMD care. OCT produces high-resolution cross-sectional images that reveal drusen, fluid (the hallmark of active wet AMD), geographic atrophy, and pigment epithelial detachments. OCT is performed at virtually every visit and can detect fluid before you notice vision changes.
  • Fundus Autofluorescence (FAF): Maps RPE health and is the primary tool for tracking geographic atrophy progression. FAF is used to measure lesion size and monitor treatment response for the new GA therapies.
  • OCT-Angiography (OCTA): A dye-free technique that detects abnormal blood vessel growth (macular neovascularization) by imaging blood flow, supplementing or sometimes replacing traditional angiography.
  • Fluorescein and ICG Angiography: Used as an adjunctive test to confirm the diagnosis and type of macular degeneration.
  • ForeseeHome Monitoring Device: An FDA-cleared home monitoring device for patients with intermediate dry AMD at risk of conversion to wet AMD. In clinical studies, 94% of patients using ForeseeHome who converted to wet AMD maintained 20/40 or better vision at detection, compared to only 62% using standard office visits alone. ForeseeHome is covered by Medicare.

Treatment Options at RVC

Treatment depends on the type and stage of your AMD. While there is no cure, effective treatments exist at every stage — and early detection consistently produces the best outcomes.

AREDS2 Vitamin Supplementation (For Intermediate Dry AMD)

The AREDS2 formula — containing lutein 10 mg, zeaxanthin 2 mg, vitamin C 500 mg, vitamin E 400 IU, zinc 80 mg, and copper 2 mg — is clinically proven to reduce the risk of progressing to advanced AMD by approximately 25% over 5 years. AREDS2 is recommended specifically for patients with intermediate AMD or advanced AMD in one eye. The AREDS2 formulation is a safer and equally effective formulation compared to the original AREDS formulation (which contained beta-carotene that can increase lung cancer risk in smokers).

Complement Inhibitors (For Geographic Atrophy)

In 2023, two treatments became the first ever approved for geographic atrophy — a historic milestone for dry AMD. Pegcetacoplan (Syfovre) and avacincaptad pegol (Izervay) are intravitreal injections that target the complement system to slow the rate of GA expansion by approximately 14–28% depending on the treatment and timepoint. They cannot restore lost vision, but they slow a disease that previously had no treatment. Earlier initiation appears to provide greater benefit over time.

Anti-VEGF Injections (For Wet AMD)

Anti-VEGF therapy transformed wet AMD from an untreatable blinding disease into one where most patients maintain vision. These injections block vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), the protein that drives abnormal blood vessel growth and fluid leakage. Current FDA-approved agents include Lucentis, Eylea, Pavblu, Vabysmo, and Eylea HD. In clinical trials, 90–95% of treated patients maintain vision, and 30–40% gain significant improvement. Treatment typically begins with monthly injections, then transitions to longer intervals (up to every 4 months with some agents) as your eye responds. Treatment continues indefinitely — wet AMD requires ongoing monitoring and most patients need ongoing injections.

Photobiomodulation (PBM) Therapy (For Intermediate Dry AMD)

PBM uses multiwavelength light (yellow, red and near-infrared) to improve retinal and RPE mitochondrial function. The LIGHTSITE III trial demonstrated a 70-75% reduction in risk of progression to advanced dry AMD and a modest improvement in vision in some patients.

Clinical Trials

Retina Vision Consultants offers patients access to cutting-edge investigational treatments including stem cell therapy. While not every patient may qualify for these trials, we provide resources to ensure that patients stay up to date on investigational treatments offered at our clinical trials site and others around the world.

Living With AMD: What to Expect

Will I go blind? With ongoing surveillance and early intervention, we have a number of treatments available to prevent vision loss or restore vision in patients with AMD.

Early and intermediate AMD progress slowly and most patients retain functional vision for years with monitoring, AREDS2 supplementation, and now, photobiomodulation (PBM) therapy. Geographic atrophy causes gradual but permanent central vision loss that the new treatments can slow but not reverse. Wet AMD can cause rapid vision loss if untreated, but the majority of treated patients maintain or improve their vision.

How often will I need to be seen? Early AMD requires annual exams. Intermediate AMD requires visits every 6 months with regular home monitoring between visits. Patients on treatment for geographic atrophy or wet AMD are seen approximately monthly during active treatment, with intervals extending as the condition stabilizes.

Your other eye matters. If you have late AMD in one eye, the fellow eye carries a substantial risk of progression: up to 40-50%. Both eyes are monitored at every visit to our office.

When to See a Retina Specialist

If you are over 50, you should have a dilated eye exam at least every year. If you have been diagnosed with AMD, regular monitoring by a retina specialist is essential because the condition can progress or convert to wet AMD without warning.

If you notice sudden distortion, wavy lines, a new dark spot, or rapid blurring in your central vision, call Retina Vision Consultants immediately at (310) 269-8565 to request a same-day appointment. Early intervention is the single most important factor in preserving your vision.

Frequently Asked Questions

There is currently no cure for AMD. However, effective treatments exist at every stage. AREDS2 supplements reduce progression risk by 25% for intermediate dry AMD, two newly approved complement inhibitors slow geographic atrophy for the first time, and anti-VEGF injections stabilize or improve vision in the vast majority of wet AMD patients.

Early AMD often has no noticeable symptoms and is frequently discovered during a routine dilated eye exam. When symptoms do occur, they may include subtle blurring of central vision, increased need for bright light when reading, and colors appearing less vivid. Regular eye exams after age 50 are the most reliable way to detect AMD early.

The AREDS2 formula — containing lutein, zeaxanthin, vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc, and copper — is the only supplement clinically proven to reduce AMD progression, lowering the risk of advancing to late AMD by approximately 25%. It is recommended for patients with intermediate AMD or advanced AMD in one eye. Patients should use the AREDS2 formulation specifically and confirm with their doctor before starting.

Dry AMD is the more common form (85–90% of cases), caused by drusen accumulation and gradual thinning of the macula over years. Wet AMD (10–15% of cases) occurs when abnormal blood vessels grow beneath the retina and leak fluid or blood, causing rapid vision loss within weeks. Although less common, wet AMD accounts for about 90% of severe vision loss from AMD. Dry AMD can convert to wet AMD at any stage.

Yes. In 2023, pegcetacoplan (Syfovre) and avacincaptad pegol (Izervay) became the first treatments ever approved for geographic atrophy, the advanced form of dry AMD. Both are intravitreal injections that slow the rate of atrophic lesion growth by approximately 14–28%. While they cannot restore lost vision, they represent a historic advance for patients who previously had no treatment options. Photobiomodulation therapy has also received FDA clearance for the treatment of intermediate stage dry AMD and can significantly decrease the risk of progression to more advanced dry AMD.

Portrait of Dr. Pradeep S. Prasad, MD, MBA

Dr. Pradeep Prasad, MD, MBA

Vitreoretinal Surgeon, Retina Vision Consultants

Medically reviewed on
December 2, 2025

Portrait of Dr. Pradeep S. Prasad, MD, MBA

Dr. Pradeep Prasad, MD, MBA

Vitreoretinal Surgeon, Retina Vision Consultants

Medically reviewed on
February 19, 2026

Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your eye care provider or retina specialist for guidance specific to your condition.

Dr. Kirk K. Hou and Dr. Pradeep S. Prasad of Retina Vision Consultants

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