Introduction: Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a progressive retinal disease that degrades the eye's ability to grasp visual acuity. The antivascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapies have made significant strides in improving the quality of life, and there is a continued opportunity to improve delivery, outcomes, and patient convenience and compliance. The treatments available could gain better clinical outcome from novel therapeutics through nanotechnology application.Areas covered: This review summarizes AMD biology and the pathophysiology of the disease along with the successes and limitations of available therapies. It further discusses the promising nanotechnology modalities that could become the cornerstone of future AMD research for improving delivery and reducing frequency of administration thus, enabling development of novel therapeutics.Expert opinion: The robust translation from preclinical work to clinical outcome for AMD remains an unmet need. Continuing to investigate in deeper understanding of biology and advancing high-quality targets into the clinic in combination with the application of advanced nanotechnology to design patient-centric offerings for both dry and wet AMD is needed. Because of the lack of regulatory precedence, and challenging manufacturing and supply chain need, the future of nano-enabled technologies is challenging but presents exciting treatment options for AMD.
Keywords: AMD; aseptic manufacturing; delivery; nanotechnology; regulatory; vegf.