“…These results suggest that the known baseline factors predictive of VMA resolution, which were used as key inclusion criteria for the OASIS study, may be necessary but not sufficient to predict FTMH closure. Nevertheless, consistent with our findings, previous studies investigating FTMH closure rates following ocriplasmin treatment have repeatedly shown FTMH size at baseline to be the most consistent predictive factor, with a greater proportion of patients experiencing hole closure with an FTMH ≤ 250 m compared to those with an FTMH > 250-400 m. [14,36,37,44] In contrast, the natural history of untreated FTMH has revealed that spontaneous closure rates are low, ranging from 3-11%. [45][46][47][48][49] Although smaller holes have a comparatively better chance of spontaneous closure compared to larger ones, previous studies have shown that the majority of stage 2 macular holes (<400 m) progress to stage 3 and beyond if left untreated.…”