RETINOPATHY IN DIABETES
Diabetic retinopathy
progresses from mild nonproliferative abnormalities, characterized by increased
vascular permeability, to moderate and severe nonproliferative diabetic
retinopathy (NPDR), characterized by vascular closure, to proliferative
diabetic retinopathy (PDR), characterized by the growth of new blood vessels on
the retina and posterior surface of the vitreous. Macular edema, characterized
by retinal thickening from leaky blood vessels, can develop at all stages of
retinopathy. Pregnancy, puberty, blood glucose control, hypertension, and
cataract surgery can accelerate these changes. Vision-threatening retinopathy is rare in type 1 diabetic
patients in the first 3–5 years of diabetes or before puberty. During the next
two decades, nearly all type 1 diabetic patients develop retinopathy. Up to 21%
of patients with type 2 diabetes have retinopathy at the time of first
diagnosis of diabetes, and most develop some degree of retinopathy over time.
Vision loss due to diabetic retinopathy results from several mechanisms.
Central vision may be impaired by macular edema or capillary nonperfusion. New
blood vessels of PDR and contraction of the accompanying fibrous tissue can
distort the retina and lead to tractional retinal detachment, producing severe
and often irreversible vision loss. In addition, the new blood vessels may
bleed, adding the further complication of preretinal or vitreous hemorrhage.
Finally, neovascular glaucoma associated with PDR can be a cause of visual
loss.
The duration of diabetes is probably the strongest
predictor for development and progression of retinopathy. Among younger-onset
patients with diabetes in the WESDR, the prevalence of any retinopathy was 8%
at 3 years, 25% at 5 years, 60% at 10 years, and 80% at 15 years. The
prevalence of PDR was 0% at 3 years and increased to 25% at 15 years (1). The incidence of
retinopathy also increased with increasing duration. The 4-year incidence of
developing proliferative retinopathy in the WESDR younger-onset group increased
from 0% during the first 5 years to 27.9% during years 13–14 of diabetes. After
15 years, the incidence of developing PDR remained stable.
The Diabetes Control and Complications
Trial (DCCT) investigated the effect of hyperglycemia in type 1 diabetic
patients, as well as the incidence of diabetic retinopathy, nephropathy, and
neuropathy. A total of 1,441 patients who had either no retinopathy at baseline
(primary prevention cohort) or minimal-to-moderate NPDR (secondary progression
cohort) were treated by either conventional treatment (one or two daily
injections of insulin) or intensive diabetes management with three or more
daily insulin injections or a continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion. In the
primary prevention cohort, the cumulative incidence of progression in
retinopathy over the first 36 months was quite similar between the two groups.
After that time, there was a persistent decrease in the intensive group.
Intensive therapy reduced the mean risk of retinopathy by 76% (95% CI 62–85).
In the secondary intervention cohort, the intensive group had a higher
cumulative incidence of sustained progression during the first year. However,
by 36 months, the intensive group had lower risks of progression. Intensive
therapy reduced the risk of progression by 54% (95% CI 39–66).
The UKPDS also investigated the influence of tight blood
pressure control (2). A total of 1,148
hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes were randomized to less tight
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To determine whether intensive blood pressure control
offers additional benefit over moderate control, the Appropriate Blood Pressure
Control in Diabetes (ABCD) Trial (3) randomized
patients to either intensive or moderate blood pressure control. Hypertensive
subjects, defined as having a baseline diastolic blood pressure of ≥90 mmHg,
were randomized to intensive blood pressure control (diastolic blood pressure
goal of 75 mmHg) versus moderate blood pressure control (diastolic blood
pressure goal of 80–89 mmHg). A total of 470 patients were randomized to either
nisoldipine or enalapril and followed for a mean of 5.3 years. The mean blood
pressure achieved was 132/78 mmHg in the intensive group and 138/86 mmHg in the
moderate control group. Although intensive therapy demonstrated a lower
incidence of deaths (5.5 vs. 10.7%, P =
0.037), there was no difference between the intensive and moderate groups with
regard to the progression of diabetic retinopathy and neuropathy.
To determine whether inhibitors of ACE can slow
progression of nephropathy in patients without hypertension, the EURODIAB
Controlled Trial of Lisinopril in Insulin Dependent Diabetes (EUCLID) study
group investigated the effect of lisinopril on retinopathy in type 1 diabetes.
Eligible patients were not hypertensive, and were normoalbuminuric (85%) or
microalbuminuric. The proportion of patients with retinopathy at baseline was
similar, but patients assigned to lisinopril had significantly lower HbA1c at baseline. Treatment reduced the development of
retinopathy, but the effect may have been due to its pressure-lowering effect
in patients who had undetected hypertension. Until these issues are addressed,
these findings need to be confirmed before changes to clinical practice can be
advocated.
The Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy
Study (ETDRS) investigated whether aspirin (650 mg/day) could retard the
progression of retinopathy. After examining progression of retinopathy,
development of vitreous hemorrhage, or duration of vitreous hemorrhage, aspirin
was shown to have no effect on retinopathy. With these findings, there are no
ocular contraindications to the use of aspirin when required for cardiovascular
disease or other medical indications.
The Diabetic Retinopathy Study (DRS)
investigated whether scatter (panretinal) photocoagulation, compared with
indefinite deferral, could reduce the risk of vision loss from PDR. After only
2 years, photocoagulation was shown to significantly reduce severe visual loss
(i.e., best acuity of 5/200 or worse). The benefit persisted through the entire
duration of follow-up and was greatest among patients whose eyes had high-risk
characteristics (HRCs; disc neovascularization or vitreous hemorrhage with any
retinal neovasculariztion). The treatment effect was much smaller for eyes that
did not have HRCs.
An important cause of blindness, diabetic
retinopathy has few visual or ophthalmic symptoms until visual loss develops.
At present, laser photocoagulation for diabetic retinopathy is effective at
slowing the progression of retinopathy and reducing visual loss, but the
treatment usually does not restore lost vision. Because these treatments are
aimed at preventing vision loss and retinopathy can be asymptomatic, it is
important to identify and treat patients early in the disease. To achieve this
goal, patients with diabetes should be routinely evaluated to detect treatable
disease.
Dilated indirect ophthalmoscopy coupled
with biomicroscopy and seven-standard field stereoscopic 30° fundus photography
are both accepted methods for examining diabetic retinopathy. Stereo fundus
photography is more sensitive at detecting retinopathy than clinical
examination, but clinical examination is superior for detecting retinal thickening
from macular edema and for early neovascularization. Fundus photography also
requires both a trained photographer and a trained reader.
The use of film and digital nonmydriatic
images to examine for diabetic retinopathy has been described. Although they
permit undilated photographic retinopathy screening, these techniques have not
been fully evaluated. The use of the nonmydriatic camera for follow-up of
patients with diabetes in the physician’s office might be considered in
situations where dilated eye examination cannot be obtained.
Guidelines for the frequency of dilated eye examinations
have been largely based on the severity of the retinopathy (1,4). For patients
with moderate-to-severe NPDR, frequent eye examinations are necessary to
determine when to initiate treatment. However, for patients without retinopathy
or with only few microaneurysms, the need for annual dilated eye examinations
is not as well defined. For these patients, the annual incidence of progression
to either proliferative retinopathy or macular edema is low; therefore, some
have suggested a longer interval between examinations (5). Recently,
analyses suggested that annual examination for some patients with type 2
diabetes may not be cost-effective and that consideration should be given to
increasing the screening interval (6). However, these
analyses may not have completely considered all the factors: 1) The analyses assumed that legal blindness was the only
level of visual loss with economic consequences, but other visual function
outcomes, such as visual acuity worse than 20/40, are clinically important,
occur much more frequently, and have economic consequences. 2) The analyses used NPDR progression figures from newly
diagnosed patients with diabetes (7). Although rates
of progression are stratified by HbA1c levels,
newly diagnosed patients are different from those with the same level of
retinopathy and have a longer diabetes duration. While rates of progression
correlate with HbA1c levels, newly diagnosed
patients with the same level of retinopathy progress differently than those
with longer duration of disease. A person with a longer duration of diabetes is
more likely to progress during the next year of observation (8). 3) The rates of progression were derived from diabetic
individuals of northern European extraction and are not applicable to other
ethnic and racial groups who have higher rates of retinopathy progression, such
as African- and Hispanic-Americans (9,10).
After considering these issues, and in the
absence of empirical data showing otherwise, persons with diabetes should have
an annual eye examination.
Treatment modalities exist that can prevent
or delay the onset of diabetic retinopathy, as well as prevent loss of vision,
in a large proportion of patients with diabetes. The DCCT and the UKPDS
established that glycemic and blood pressure control can prevent and delay the
progression of diabetic retinopathy in patients with diabetes. Timely laser
photocoagulation therapy can also prevent loss of vision in a large proportion
of patients with severe NPDR and PDR and/or macular edema. Because a
significant number of patients with vision-threatening disease may not have
symptoms, ongoing evaluation for retinopathy is a valuable and required
strategy.
The recommendations for initial and subsequent
ophthalmologic evaluation of patients with diabetes are stated below and
summarized in Table 1.
·
Patients with type 1 diabetes should have
an initial dilated and comprehensive eye examination by an ophthalmologist or
optometrist within 3–5 years after the onset of diabetes. In general,
evaluation for diabetic eye disease is not necessary before 10 years of age.
However, some evidence suggests that the prepubertal duration of diabetes may
be important in the development of microvascular complications; therefore,
clinical judgment should be used when applying these recommendations to
individual patients. (B)
·
Patients with type 2 diabetes should have
an initial dilated and comprehensive eye examination by an ophthalmologist or
optometrist shortly after diabetes diagnosis. (B)
·
Subsequent examinations for both type 1 and
type 2 diabetic patients should be repeated annually by an ophthalmologist or
optometrist who is knowledgeable and experienced in diagnosing the presence of
diabetic retinopathy and is aware of its management. Less frequent exams (every
2–3 years) may be considered with the advice of an eye care professional in the
setting of a normal eye exam. Examinations will be required more frequently if
retinopathy is progressing. This follow-up interval is recommended recognizing
that there are limited data addressing this issue. (B)
·
When planning pregnancy, women with
preexisting diabetes should have a comprehensive eye examination and should be
counseled on the risk of development and/or progression of diabetic
retinopathy. Women with diabetes who become pregnant should have a
comprehensive eye examination in the first trimester and close follow-up
throughout pregnancy (Table 1). This
guideline does not apply to women who develop gestational diabetes, because
such individuals are not at increased risk for diabetic retinopathy. (B)
·
Patients with any level of macular edema,
severe NPDR, or any PDR require the prompt care of an ophthalmologist who is
knowledgeable and experienced in the management and treatment of diabetic
retinopathy. Referral to an ophthalmologist should not be delayed until PDR has
developed in patients who are known to have severe nonproliferative or more
advanced retinopathy. Early referral to an ophthalmologist is particularly
important for patients with type 2 diabetes and severe NPDR, since laser
treatment at this stage is associated with a 50% reduction in the risk of
severe visual loss and vitrectomy. (E)
·
Patients who experience vision loss from
diabetes should be encouraged to pursue visual rehabilitation with an
ophthalmologist or optometrist who is trained or experienced in low-vision
care. (E)
Prof.
John Kurakar
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