Загрузил Alina

Diabetic retinopathy

реклама
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Developments in
Ophthalmology
Vol. 39
Series Editor
W. Behrens-Baumann, Magdeburg
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Diabetic Retinopathy
Volume Editor
Gabriele E. Lang, Ulm
35 figures, 3 in color, and 25 tables, 2007
Basel · Freiburg · Paris · London · New York ·
Bangalore · Bangkok · Singapore · Tokyo · Sydney
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Gabriele E. Lang
Universitätsklinikum Ulm
Augenklinik
Prittwitzstrasse 43
DE–89075 Ulm
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Diabetic retinopathy / volume editor, Gabriele E. Lang.
p. ; cm. – (Developments in ophthalmology, ISSN 0250-3751 ; v. 39)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN-13: 978-3-8055-8243-8 (hardcover : alk. paper)
ISBN-10: 3-8055-8243-9 (hardcover : alk. paper)
1. Diabetic retinopathy. I. Lang, Gabriele E. II. Series.
[DNLM: 1. Diabetic Retinopathy–therapy. 2. Diabetic
Retinopathy–diagnosis. W1 DE998NG v. 39 2007 / WK 835 D53626 2007]
RE661.D5D52 2007
617.7⬘35–dc22
2006038094
Bibliographic Indices. This publication is listed in bibliographic services, including Current Contents® and
Index Medicus.
Disclaimer. The statements, options and data contained in this publication are solely those of the individual authors and contributors and not of the publisher and the editor(s). The appearance of advertisements in the
book is not a warranty, endorsement, or approval of the products or services advertised or of their effectiveness,
quality or safety. The publisher and the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to persons or property
resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content or advertisements.
Drug Dosage. The authors and the publisher have exerted every effort to ensure that drug selection and
dosage set forth in this text are in accord with current recommendations and practice at the time of publication.
However, in view of ongoing research, changes in government regulations, and the constant flow of information
relating to drug therapy and drug reactions, the reader is urged to check the package insert for each drug for
any change in indications and dosage and for added warnings and precautions. This is particularly important when
the recommended agent is a new and/or infrequently employed drug.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be translated into other languages, reproduced or
utilized in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, microcopying,
or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
© Copyright 2007 by S. Karger AG, P.O. Box, CH–4009 Basel (Switzerland)
www.karger.com
Printed in Switzerland on acid-free paper by Reinhardt Druck, Basel
ISSN 0250–3751
ISBN-10: 3–8055–8243–9
ISBN-13: 978–3–8055–8243–8
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Contents
VII List of Contributors
IX Preface
Lang, G.E. (Ulm)
1 Pathophysiology of Diabetic Macular Edema
Joussen, A.M. (Duesseldorf/Cologne); Smyth, N. (Cologne/Southampton);
Niessen, C. (Cologne)
13 Characterization and Relevance of Different Diabetic
Retinopathy Phenotypes
Cunha-Vaz, J. (Coimbra)
31 Optical Coherence Tomography Findings in Diabetic Retinopathy
Lang, G.E. (Ulm)
48 Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
Lang, G.E. (Ulm)
69 Benefits and Limitations in Vitreoretinal Surgery for
Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy and Macular Edema
Joussen, A.M. (Duesseldorf); Joeres, S. (Cologne)
88 Diffuse Diabetic Macular Edema: Pathology and Implications for Surgery
Gandorfer, A. (München)
96 Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
Jonas, J.B. (Heidelberg)
V
dramroo@Yahoo.com
111 Use of Long-Acting Somatostatin Analogue Treatment in Diabetic
Retinopathy
Boehm, B.O. (Ulm)
122 Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor and the Potential Therapeutic
Use of Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
Starita, C. (Sandwich); Patel, M.; Katz, B.; Adamis, A.P. (New York, N.Y.)
149 Pharmacologic Vitreolysis
Gandorfer, A. (München)
157 Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy with Protein Kinase
C Subtype ␤ Inhibitor
Lang, G.E. (Ulm)
166 Subject Index
Contents
VI
dramroo@Yahoo.com
List of Contributors
Tony Adamis
(OSI) Eyetech, Inc.
3 Times Square
New York
NY 10036 (USA)
University of Southern California
1450 San Pablo Street DEI 3623
Los Angeles
CA 90033 (USA)
Jost B. Jonas
Universitäts-Augenklinik
Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1-3
DE–68167 Mannheim (Germany)
Bernhard O. Boehm
Division of Endocrinology and
Diabetes, Ulm University
Robert-Koch-Strasse 8
DE–89081 Ulm (Germany)
José Cunha-Vaz
AIBILI
Azinhaga Santa Comba, Celas
PT–3000-548 Coimbra (Portugal)
Arnd Gandorfer
Vitreoretinal and Pathology Unit
Augenklinik der LudwigMaximilians-Universität
Mathildenstrasse 8
DE–80336 München (Germany)
Sandra Joeres, MD
Medical Retina Unit
Doheny Image Reading Center
Doheny Eye Institute
Antonia M. Joussen
Department of Ophthalmology
Heinrich-Heine University
Duesseldorf
Moorenstraße 5
DE–40225 Duesseldorf
Barrett Katz
(OSI) Eyetech, Inc.
3 Times Square
New York
NY 10036 (USA)
Gabriele E. Lang
Universitätsklinikum Ulm,
Augenklinik
Prittwitzstrasse 43
DE–89075 Ulm (Germany)
VII
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Dr. Carien Niessen
Center for Molecular Medicine
Cologne (CMMC)
University of Cologne, LFI, 5,
Room 59
Joseph Stelzmannstrasse 9
Manju Patel
Pfizer Inc
50 Pequot Avenue MS 6025-B2234
New London
CT 06320 (USA)
Neil Smyth
Department of Developmental and
Cell Biology
School of Biological Sciences
University of Southampton
Southampton, Hampshire
SO16 7PX (UK)
Carla Starita
Pfizer Global Research and
Development, Building 508/1.75
IPC 613
Ramsgate Road, Sandwich
CT13 9NJ Kent (UK)
FList of Contributors
VIII
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Preface
Over decades, there has been broad interest of ophthalmologists and diabetologists in diabetic retinopathy. Despite markedly improved prognosis for
visual problems due to laser treatment and vitrectomy, diabetic retinopathy is
still one of the leading causes of blindness worldwide. This book provides profound information about the newest developments in the diagnosis and treatment of diabetic retinopathy.
The pathophysiology of diabetic macular edema is complex and not yet
fully understood. The current knowledge of mechanisms of development and
progression of diabetic macular edema is described. An innovative approach of
multimedial mapping methods enables to differentiate between three diabetic
retinopathy phenotypes, allowing personalized management strategies. Highresolution imaging by optical coherence tomography provides additional, new
information about morphological findings in diabetic retinopathy.
In this book, the standards and novel approaches of laser treatment of diabetic retinopathy are described, current surgical options for diabetic retinopathy
and treatment techniques discussed, and the pathology of diffuse macular
edema and implications for surgery proposed. Additionally, the treatment of
diabetic retinopathy with triamcinolone and its complications, as well as the
hypothesis for the use of somatostatin analogues are discussed. A new therapeutical approach is the use of vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitors in
diabetic macular edema. Latest concepts of posterior vitreous detachment by
pharmacological vitreolysis are described. An innovative pharmacological compound, the specific protein kinase C subtype ␤ inhibitor ruboxistaurin mesylate,
significantly reduces the risk of visual loss in nonproliferative diabetic
IX
dramroo@Yahoo.com
retinopathy and holds promise to improve the visual prognosis in patients with
diabetic retinopathy.
The book provides an update of new insights into the pathogenesis, diagnosis and especially the treatment of diabetic retinopathy and gives detailed
information about latest research achievements. Therefore, it is suitable for general ophthalmologists, retina specialists and diabetologists. It provides a collection of latest findings in diabetic retinopathy by excellent authors, and
therefore, deserves the attention of everyone who is interested in this subject.
I want to thank all the coworkers for their great efforts in passing on their
profound knowledge. The contents of the book will not only advance our understanding of diabetic retinopathy based on the provided knowledge, but also
improve our diagnosis and treatment strategies in the permanent efforts to help
the numerous patients who suffer from diabetic retinopathy and are threatened
by visual problems.
Prof. Dr. Gabriele E. Lang, Ulm
Preface
X
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 1–12
Pathophysiology of Diabetic
Macular Edema
Antonia M. Joussena,b, Neil Smythb,c, Carien Niessenb
a
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Duesseldorf, Duesseldorf, and
Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany;
c
School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
b
Abstract
Diabetic maculopathy is the leading cause of visual loss in diabetic patients. The pathogenesis is not fully understood and a satisfactory therapy is currently not available. Malfunction
of the blood-retinal barrier plays a central role in the disease and leads to retinal edema and secondary photoreceptor dysfunction. Diabetic vascular leakage and macular edema are regulated
by a distinct combination of direct paracellular transport, alterations in endothelial intercellular
junctions and endothelial cell death. The distribution and relevance of these three factors to diabetic maculopathy varies over the course of the disease. Cumulative endothelial cell death will
become more relevant after prolonged diabetic conditions. This article reviews the current
knowledge on the pathogenic mechanisms of diabetic macular edema.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
The significant morbidity and mortality of diabetes mellitus predominantly results from its complications, among which the vascular dysfunction
leading to macular edema resembles the most important vision-threatening
complication.
Hyperglycemia is the metabolic hallmark of diabetes and leads to widespread cellular damage. Endothelial cells are particularly vulnerable to hyperglycemia because they can poorly regulate intracellular glucose. An excess of
glucose sets off a chain of metabolic events that culminate in overproduction of
reactive oxygen species in the mitochondria and, in turn, leads to increased flux in
the hexosamine and polyol pathways, increased formation of advanced glycation
endproducts and activation of protein kinase C. These metabolic changes result in
a plethora of tissue-specific functional defects with diabetes-associated vasculopathy as the central mediator of the pathophysiology of diabetic complications.
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Early stages of vascular dysfunction are characterized by a breakdown of
the blood-retinal barrier in both humans and rodent models of experimental diabetes. Breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier can be observed prior to latestage vascular alterations leading to proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Blood-retinal barrier breakdown contributes to macular edema, which
occurs in over 25% of people with diabetes and correlates highly with visual
impairment in people with diabetic retinopathy [1]. Treatment by laser coagulation is limited to focal edema, but is controversial in diffuse edema and proven
to be ineffective in ischemic diabetic maculopathy.
Breakdown of the Blood-Retinal Barrier
Although changes to retinal blood flow may partially explain the extravasation of fluid, the most important mechanism is the breakdown of the bloodretinal barriers [2].
The movement of water through the blood-retinal barrier appears to have two
dominant components: a passive (bidirectional) transport and an active transport
directed from the retina to the blood. Theoretically, macular edema develops
when the inflow of fluid into the retina exceeds the outflow. Passive transport
(permeability) of fluorescein has been shown to increase in relation to the progression of retinopathy [3, 4]. In vitro studies of isolated retinal pigment epitheliumchoroid preparations showed that the outward active transport of fluorescein is
substantially greater than the passive transport and that this transport is inhibited
by metabolic (oubain) and competitive inhibitors (probenecid) [5–8]. Unlike
active transport, passive permeability is related to the degree of retinopathy in that
eyes with severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy have a passive permeability
that is significantly increased compared with moderate retinopathy. The active
resorptive functions of the blood-retinal barrier in diabetes are likely to be
increased to counteract edema formation, although the increase is too little [9].
Besides the retinal pigment epithelium (outer blood-retinal barrier), the vascular endothelium (inner blood-retinal barrier) forms the main barrier against the
passage of macromolecules and circulating cells from blood to the extracelluar
space. In diabetes, the endothelial cell loss of the retinal vessels is likely to account
for the majority of the early blood-retinal barrier breakdown and is the initial site
of damage. Passive permeability through the endothelium can be increased by
three general mechanisms: (1) increased transcellular transport, (2) dysfunction of
the intercellular junctions, and (3) increased endothelial cell destruction.
Although other factors such as impairment of the perivascular supporting
cells might influence vascular permeability, the primary damage is likely to predominantly affect endothelial cells.
Joussen/Smyth/Niessen
2
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Transcellular Transport
Besides an increase in vascular permeability through endothelial cell death
and alterations in the cell-cell junctions, direct transport via pinocytosis is
potentially involved in the increased diabetic vascular leakage [10, 11]. Despite
the fact that pinocytic transport is critically involved in transepithelial fluid
exchange, its regulation in diabetic retinopathy has not been investigated in the
context of the molecular factors involved, as outlined above.
Distinct growth factors are causally related to neovascularization and/
or vascular leakage: the disruption of endothelial integrity leads to retinal
ischemia and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-mediated iris and retinal neovascularization [12–14]. VEGF is 50,000 times more potent than histamine in causing vascular permeability [15–20]. Previous work has shown that
retinal VEGF levels correlate with diabetic blood-retinal barrier breakdown in
rodents [21, 22] and humans [23]. Flt-1(1-3Ig)Fc, a soluble VEGF receptor,
reverses early diabetic blood-retinal barrier breakdown and diabetic leukostasis
in a dose-dependent manner [14]. Early blood-retinal barrier breakdown localizes, in part, to retinal venules and capillaries of the superficial inner retinal circulation [24] and can be sufficiently reduced by VEGF inhibition. Although
VEGF is only one of the molecules involved in the various cytokine cascades, it
is likely to be one of the most efficient therapeutic targets. Ongoing clinical
studies investigate the efficacy of VEGF inhibition on diabetic macular edema.
Due to the current knowledge, VEGF causes vascular hyperpermeability
by opening interendothelial junctions and induction of fenestrations and
vesiculo-vacuolar organelles. As for the blood-retinal barrier endothelium,
other cellular mechanisms may translate increased permeability caused by
VEGF [25]. In these leaky blood vessels, the number of pinocytotic vesicles
at the endothelial luminal membrane is significantly higher, and these pinocytotic vesicles transport plasma immunoglobulin G. By electron microscopy, no
fenestrations or vesicles were found in the endothelial cells of the VEGFaffected eyes.
Intercellular Junctions and Their Alterations in
Diabetic Retinopathy
Endothelial cells are important constituents of the vasculature and essential for the separation of blood from the surrounding tissues. They also control
the passage of proteins and cells from the blood stream into these tissues, either
by using a specialized transcellular vesicle transport system or by selective
opening and closing of intercellular junctions.
Pathophysiology of Diabetic Edema
3
dramroo@Yahoo.com
It is likely that inflammatory agents increase permeability by binding to
specific receptors that transduce intercellular signals, which in turn cause
cytoskeletal reorganization and coordinated widening of the interendothelial
contacts. Endothelial junctions also regulate leukocyte extravasation upon
inflammatory stimuli. Once leukocytes have adhered to the endothelium, a
coordinated opening of interendothelial cell junctions occurs without the loss of
its barrier function. Under diabetic conditions, inflammatory mediators may
cause aberrant opening of intercellular contacts, now also resulting in loss of
barrier function and thus vascular leakage. However, both the regulation and the
structural composition of retinal endothelial junctions and their alterations in
diabetic retinopathy are largely unknown.
Composition of Intercellular Junctions in the Retina
Intercellular junctions of vascular endothelial cells consist of tight junctions, adherens junctions and gap junctions. Depending on the type of vessel,
there is a fourth structure called ‘complexus adherents’ or ‘syndesmosome’
consisting of a mixture of adherens junction components and desmosomal
components [26]. Although endothelial cells are polarized, tight junctions are
not only found at the interface between the apical and basolateral membrane
domains, as observed in simple epithelia, but are often intermingled with the
adherens junctions all along the cleft [27]. The molecular composition and
complexity of intercellular junctions varies along the vasculature. More complex and distinct structures are formed in those cells with an increased barrier
function, such as the blood-retinal barrier [28].
Both tight junctions and adherens junctions consist of transmembrane
molecules, which connect cells with each other and are linked to cytoskeletal
linker molecules [29, 30]. In addition, a variety of regulatory molecules are also
found at these sites. These are most likely important for the regulated interaction with the cytoskeleton and for communicating alterations in adhesion.
Alterations in Intercellular Junctions in Diabetic Retinopathy
One of the first clinical manifestations in diabetic retinopathy is vascular
leakage, indicating that disturbance of the blood-retinal barrier is an early
event. Even though tracer studies have shown a disturbance in the paracellular
pathway [31], relatively little is known about how the molecular junctional
components are affected. In the streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat model,
occludin distribution and amounts are altered correlating with an increase in
paracellular permeability [31].
In humans, there is one report on decreased expression of vascular
endothelial (VE)-cadherin in the diabetic retina [32]. Alterations induced
by diabetes have also been described in the placental vasculature where ZO-1,
Joussen/Smyth/Niessen
4
dramroo@Yahoo.com
VE-cadherin, ␤-catenin and occludin showed reduced staining at the junctions
correlating with an increase in tyrosine phosphorylation [33].
Regulation of Junctional Stability, Strength and Permeability
Intercellular junctions are dynamic entities even under steady-state conditions and can exchange molecular components and interactions without losing
cell-cell contact or barrier function.
VEGF can induce phosphorylation of the tight junctional proteins occludin
and ZO-1 [34]. In the diabetic retina, VEGF is strongly upregulated and has
been implicated as a mediator of vascular leakage and neovascularization. At
present, it is not known how the VE-cadherin/VEGF receptor interaction and its
signaling pathway is altered in diabetic retinopathy.
Diabetes is a consequence of insulin deficiency or insulin resistance. Thus,
diabetic retinopathy may be caused directly by absent or aberrant insulin receptor signaling or it may result from secondary effects, since insulin signaling
affects a diverse range of downstream pathways. Specific deletion of either the
insulin receptor or its close relative the insulin-like growth factor receptor in
vascular endothelial cells did not result in any obvious decrease in vascular
integrity, nor did it seem to compromise the blood-brain barrier, arguing for the
latter situation [35]. However, a direct effect cannot be ruled out because of
overlapping functions of the insulin receptor and insulin-like growth factor
receptor.
Matrix Changes Affect Formation of Edema in the
Diabetic Retina
Degradation of the extracellular matrix affects endothelial cell function at
many levels, causing endothelial cell liability which is required for cellular
invasion and proliferation, or influencing the cellular resistance and therefore
the vascular permeability. The degradation and modulation of the extracellular
matrix is exerted by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), a family of zinc-binding,
calcium-dependent enzymes [36, 37]. Elevated expression of MMP-9 and
MMP-2 has been shown in diabetic neovascular membranes [38, 39], although
a direct effect of glucose on MMP-9 expression in vascular endothelial cells
could not be shown [40].
It is likely that MMPs participate at various stages during the course of the
blood-retinal barrier dysfunction and breakdown. Their actions include early
changes of the endothelial cell resistance that influence intercellular junction
formation and function [41] and active participation in the endothelial and pericyte cell death [42] occurring late in the course of the disease.
Pathophysiology of Diabetic Edema
5
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Extracellular matrix and basement membrane components are required for
cellular adhesion, migration and differentiation. They also play a particular role
in the delimiting of tissue boundaries and the formation of vascular and neural
networks. Changes in the deposition of the extracellular matrix during diabetes
mellitus are well established. However, the molecular composition of the basement membranes in the normal and diabetic retina is only poorly described.
Furthermore, alterations in the repertoire of cellular receptors for basement
membrane components and the effects these changes may have upon the cells
of the retina have not been investigated.
Basement membranes are specialized extracellular matrices found underlying all epithelia and endothelia and surround many mesenchymal cell types.
Besides separating tissues, they have important roles in axonal guidance and
neuronal migration and survival, as well as synapse formation [43], both by acting directly upon specific cell receptors and by acting as a reservoir for many
growth factors, in particular the fibroblast growth factor and transforming
growth factor-␤ family [44].
All basement membranes are formed by members of three ubiquitous protein families, i.e. laminins, nidogens and collagen IV, and by the proteoglycan
perlecan. Basement membrane variability is derived from the fact that there are
15 laminin isoforms [45], 6 collagen IV chains and 2 members of the nidogen
family. These proteins are often expressed in a highly regulated developmental
and temporal manner and vary in their use of cellular receptors. Further basement membrane diversity is produced by the presence of more restricted proteins which may be integral basement membrane proteins, such as collagen
XVIII [46], or associated with the basement membrane, such as matrilin-2 [47].
Basement membranes are found in three regions of the retina: in Bruch’s membrane underlying the pigment epithelium and separating it from the choroid, in
the vitroretinal border as the inner limiting membrane, and in the endothelial
basement membrane forming part of the blood-retinal barrier.
Cellular Interaction and Its Relevance to Vascular Leakage
Leukocyte infiltration of retinal tissue characterizes many inflammatory
diseases such as diabetes, pars planitis or choroidal inflammatory diseases. In
diabetes, activated leukocytes adhere to the retinal vascular endothelium
[12, 48]. Increased leukostasis is one of the first histological changes in diabetic
retinopathy and occurs prior to any apparent clinical pathology. Adherent leukocytes play a crucial role in diabetic retinopathy by directly inducing endothelial
cell death in capillaries [49], causing vascular obstruction and vascular leakage.
Endothelial cell death precedes the formation of acellular capillaries [48].
Joussen/Smyth/Niessen
6
dramroo@Yahoo.com
However, over time, acellular capillaries prevail and become widespread.
Although the mechanism of this destructive process remains elusive, it is clear
that the interaction between altered leukocytes and endothelial cells and the subsequent endothelial damage represents a crucial pathogenic step [12, 49–51].
Previous studies of vascular casts in diabetic retinopathy have suggested
that the loss of pericytes represents the earliest histologically visible alteration
[52, 53]. Interaction between pericytes and endothelial cells is important in the
maturation, remodeling and maintenance of the vascular system via the secretion of growth factors and/or modulation of the extracellular matrix [54]. There
is also evidence that pericytes are involved in the transport across the bloodretinal barrier and the regulation of vascular permeability.
Knowledge on vascular plasticity has greatly increased in the past years. It
is likely that in the diabetic retina, repair mechanims take place as well.
However, cell differentiation and recruitment to the vessel walls are likely to be
altered under diabetic conditions.
Adult bone marrow (BM) contains cells capable of differentiating along
hematopoietic (Lin⫹) or nonhematopoietic (Lin⫺) lineages. Lin⫺ hematopoietic stem cells have recently been shown to contain a population of endothelial
precursor cells (EPCs) with the capacity to form blood vessels [55, 56].
In a crucial set of experiments, adult mice were durably engrafted with
hematopoietic stem cells isolated from transgenic mice expressing green
fluorescent protein after which retinal ischemia was induced to promote
neovascularization [57]. In this model, self-renewing adult hematopoietic stem
cells had functional hemangioblast activity, i.e. they could clonally differentiate
into all hematopoietic cell lineages as well as into endothelial cells that revascularize adult retina.
Using green fluorescent protein chimeric mice, it was further demonstrated that laser injury of the choroidal vasculature was sufficient to induce
stem cell recruitment and subsequent formation of choroidal neovascularization. Green fluorescent protein-positive cells formed part of the functional vasculature in the choroid as early as 1 week after injury and remained present
during follow-up.
Furthermore, it was shown that intravitreally injected Lin⫺ BM cells
selectively target retinal astrocytes, cells that serve as a template for both developmental and injury-associated retinal angiogenesis. When Lin⫺ BM cells
were injected into neonatal mouse eyes, they extensively and stably incorporated into forming retinal vasculature [58]. When EPC-enriched hematopoietic
stem cells were injected into the eyes of neonatal rd/rd mice, whose vasculature
ordinarily degenerates with age, they rescued and maintained a normal vasculature. In contrast, normal retinal angiogenesis was inhibited when EPCs
expressing a potent angiostatic protein were injected.
Pathophysiology of Diabetic Edema
7
dramroo@Yahoo.com
In diabetes, it was demonstrated that BM-derived EPCs are recruited to the
pancreas in response to islet injury. EPC-mediated neovascularization of the pancreas could in principle be exploited to facilitate the recovery of nonterminally
injured ␤-cells or to improve the survival and/or function of islet allografts [59].
Taken together, these studies emphasize the likelihood of an EPC involvement in repair mechanisms of the diabetic vasculature. Besides, in increased
stem cell recruitment, these cells and their potential to differentiate might be
altered in diabetes. Although likely, alterations in stem cell recruitment and differentiation in diabetes have not yet been investigated in detail.
Endothelial Cell Damage and Apoptosis in the Diabetic Retina
Blood-retinal barrier breakdown is at least in part due to endothelial cell
damage and apoptosis. The proapoptotic molecule Fas ligand (FasL) induces
apoptosis in cells that carry its receptor Fas (CD95) [60]. There is evidence that
FasL is expressed on vascular endothelium where it functions to inhibit leukocyte extravasation. The expression of FasL on vascular endothelial cells might
thus prevent detrimental inflammation by inducing apoptosis in leukocytes as
they attempt to enter the vessel. In fact, during inflammation and ensuing tumor
necrosis factor-␣ release, the endothelium not only upregulates several adhesion molecules [61], but also downregulates FasL and allows leukocyte adherence, survival and thus migration to sites of infection and wounding. In
experimental diabetic retinopathy, inhibition of Fas-mediated apoptotic cell
death reduces vascular leakage [50]. However, diabetic endothelial cell death,
as to the cumulative damage during the diabetic course, might play an increasing role in diabetic vascular leakage, and thus, in diabetic maculopathy.
Conclusion
Diabetic macular disease is considered a structural alteration to the macula
in any of the following manners:
• collection of intraretinal fluid in the macula with or without exudates
(lipids) and with or without cystoid changes;
• nonperfusion of parafoveal capillaries with or without intraretinal fluid;
• traction in the macula by fibrous tissue proliferation that is dragging the
retinal tissue causing surface wrinkling, or detachment of the macula;
• intraretinal or preretinal hemorrhage in the macula;
• lamellar or full-thickness retinal hole formation;
• a combination of the above.
Joussen/Smyth/Niessen
8
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Early intervention in macular edema is undoubtedly advantageous, as the
risk of ultrastructural alterations induced by a persistent macular edema
increases with time. It is well known that with time, the central avascular zone
and the areas of ischemia are likely to increase. The current hope to treat even
ischemic maculopathy pharmacologically will largely depend on the long-term
results with e.g. anti-VEGF therapies or intravitreal steroids. Currently, we are
only at the edge of understanding diabetic macular edema at a molecular level,
but it becomes clear that only a thorough investigation of the pathogenesis of
diabetic retinal vascular leakage will help to identify new and potentially more
efficient targets for intervention and prophylaxis of diabetic macular edema.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Klein R, Klein BEK, Moss SE, Cruickshanks KJ: The Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic
Retinopathy. 15. The long-term incidence of macular edema. Ophthalmology 1995;102:7–16.
Antcliff RJ, Marshall J: The pathogenesis of edema in diabetic maculopathy. Semin Ophthalmol
1999;14:223–232.
Krogsaa B, Lund-Andersen H, Mehlsen J, Sestoft L, Larsen J: The blood-retinal barrier permeability in diabetic patients. Acta Ophthalmol (Copenh) 1981;59:689–694.
Bursell SE, Delori FC, Yoshida A, Parker JS, Collas GD, McMeel JW: Vitreous fluorophotometric
evaluation of diabetics. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1984;25:703–710.
Yoshida A, Ishiko S, Kojima M: Outward permeability of the blood-retinal barrier. Graefes Arch
Clin Exp Ophthalmol 1992;230:78–83.
Cunha-Vaz JG, Shakib M, Ashton N: Studies on the permeability of the blood-retinal barrier. 1.
On the existence, development, and site of a blood-retinal barrier. Br J Ophthalmol 1966;50:
441–453.
Koyano S, Araie M, Eguchi S: Movement of fluorescein and its glucuronide across retinal pigment
epithelium-choroid. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1993;34:531–538.
Engler CB, Sander B, Larsen M, Koefoed P, Parving HH, Lund-Andersen H: Probenecid inhibition of the outward transport of fluorescein across the human blood-retina barrier. Acta
Ophthalmol (Copenh) 1994;72:663–667.
Sander B, Larsen M, Moldow B, Lund-Andersen H: Diabetic macular edema: passive and active
transport of fluorescein through the blood-retina barrier. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2001;42:433–438.
Abrass CK: Measurement of the rates of basal pinocytosis of horseradish peroxidase and internalization of heat-aggregated IgG by macrophages from normal and streptozotocin-induced diabetic
rats. Immunology 1998;65:411–415.
Fitzgerald ME, Caldwell RB: The retinal microvasculature of spontaneously diabetic BB rats:
structure and luminal surface properties. Microvasc Res 1990;39:15–27.
Miyamoto K, Khosrof S, Bursell SE, Rohan R, Murata T, Clermont A, Aiello LP, Ogura Y, Adamis AP:
Prevention of leukostasis and vascular leakage in streptozotocin-induced diabetic retinopathy via
intercellular adhesion molecule-1 inhibition. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1999;96:10836–10841.
Mizutani M, Kern TS, Lorenzi M: Accelerated death of retinal microvascular cells in human and
experimental diabetic retinopathy. J Clin Invest 1996;97:2883–2890.
Joussen AM, Qin W, Poulaki V, Wiegand S, Yancopoulos GD, Adamis AP: Endogenous VEGF
induces retinal ICAM-1 and eNOS expression and initiates early diabetic retinal leukostasis. Am J
Pathol 2002;160:501–509.
Senger DR, Van de Water L, Brown LF, Nagy JA, Yeo KT, Yeo TK, Berse B, Jackman RW, Dvorak AM,
Dvorak HF: Vascular permeability factor (VPF, VEGF) in tumor biology. Cancer Metastasis Rev
1993;12:303–324.
Pathophysiology of Diabetic Edema
9
dramroo@Yahoo.com
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
Keck PJ, Hauser SD, Krivi G, Sanzo K, Warren T, Feder J, Connolly DT: Vascular permeability
factor, an endothelial cell mitogen related to PDGF. Science 1989;246:1309–1312.
Ferrara N, Houck K, Jakeman L, Leung DW: Molecular and biological properties of the vascular
endothelial growth factor family of proteins. Endocr Rev 1992;13:18–32.
Connolly DT, Olander JV, Heuvelman D, Nelson R, Monsell R, Siegel N, Haymore BL,
Leimgruber R, Feder J: Human vascular permeability factor: isolation from U937 cells. J Biol
Chem 1989;264:20017–20024.
Chomczynski P, Sacchi N: Single-step method of RNA isolation by acid guanidinium thiocyanatephenol-chloroform extraction. Anal Biochem 1987;162:156–159.
Berse B, Brown LF, Van de Water L, Dvorak HF, Senger DR: Vascular permeability factor (vascular
endothelial growth factor) gene is expressed differentially in normal tissues, macrophages, and
tumors. Mol Biol Cell 1992;3:211–220.
Engerman RL, Kern TS: Retinopathy and tissue hexose in drug-treated animals. Arch Ophthalmol
1998;116:543–544.
Verma D: Pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy – the missing link? Med Hypotheses 1993;41:
205–210.
Amin RH, Frank RN, Kennedy A, Eliott D, Puklin JE, Abrams GW: Vascular endothelial growth
factor is present in glial cells of the retina and optic nerve of human subjects with nonproliferative
diabetic retinopathy. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1999;38:36–47.
Qaum T, Xu Q, Joussen AM, Qin W, Clemens ME, Yancopoulos GD, Adamis AP: Early diabetic
blood-retinal barrier breakdown is VEGF-dependent. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2001;42:
2408–2413.
Hofman P, Blauwegers HG, Tolentino MJ, Adamis AP, Nunes Cardozo BJ, Vrensen GF,
Schlingemann RO: VEGF-A induced hyperpermeability of blood-retinal barrier endothelium in
vivo is predominantly associated with pinocytotic vesicular transport and not with formation of
fenestrations. Vascular endothelial growth factor-A. Curr Eye Res 2000;21:637–645.
Dejana E: Endothelial cell-cell junctions: happy together. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 2004;5:261–270.
Wolburg H, Lippoldt A: Tight junctions of the blood-brain barrier: development, composition and
regulation. Vascul Pharmacol 2002;38:323–337.
Schnitzer JE, Siflinger-Birnboim A, Del Vecchio PJ, Malik AB: Segmental differentiation of permeability, protein glycosylation, and morphology of cultured bovine lung vascular endothelium.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1994;199:11–19.
Gottardi CJ, Niessen CM, Gumbiner BM: The adherens juction; in Beckerle M (ed): Cell
Adhesion. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2002.
Matter K, Balda MS: Signalling to and from tight junctions. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 2003;4:
225–236.
Barber AJ, Antonetti DA: Mapping the blood vessels with paracellular permeability in the retinas
of diabetic rats. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2003;44:5410–5416.
Davidson MK, Russ PK, Glick GG, Hoffman LH, Chang MS, Haselton FR: Reduced expression
of the adherens junction protein cadherin-5 in a diabetic retina. Am J Ophthalmol 2000;129:
267–269.
Leach L, Gray C, Staton S, Babawale MO, Gruchy A, Foster C, Mayhew TM, James DK: Vascular
endothelial cadherin and ␤-catenin in human fetoplacental vessels of pregnancies complicated by
type 1 diabetes: associations with angiogenesis and perturbed barrier function. Diabetologia
2004;47:695–709.
Antonetti DA, Barber AJ, Khin S, Lieth E, Tarbell JM, Gardner TW: Vascular permeability in
experimental diabetes is associated with reduced endothelial occludin content: vascular endothelial growth factor decreases occludin in retinal endothelial cells. Penn State Retina Research
Group. Diabetes 1998;47:1953–1959.
Kondo T, Hafezi-Moghadam A, Thomas K, Wagner DD, Kahn CR: Mice lacking insulin or
insulin-like growth factor 1 receptors in vascular endothelial cells maintain normal blood-brain
barrier. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2004;317:315–320.
Matrisian LM: The matrix-degrading metalloproteinases. Bio Assays 1992;14:455–463.
Dollery CM, McEwan JR, Henney AM: Matrix metalloproteinases and cardiovascular disease.
Circ Res 1995;77:863–868.
Joussen/Smyth/Niessen
10
dramroo@Yahoo.com
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
Das A, McGuire PG, Eriqat C, Ober RR, DeJuan E Jr, Williams GA, McLamore A, Biswas J,
Johnson DW: Human diabetic neovascular membranes contain high levels of urokinase and metalloproteinase enzymes. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1999;40:809–813.
Salzmann J, Limb GA, Khaw PT, Gregor ZJ, Webster L, Chignell AH, Charteris DG: Matrix metalloproteinases and their natural inhibitors in fibrovascular membranes of proliferative diabetic
retinopathy. Br J Ophthalmol 2000;84:1091–1096.
Grant MB, Caballero S, Tarnuzzer RT, Bass KE, Ljubimov AV, Spoerri PE, Galardy RE: Matrix
metalloproteinases expression in human retinal microvascular cells. Diabetes 1998;47:1311–1317.
Fernandez-Patron C, Zouki C, Whittal R, Chan JSD, Davidge ST, Filep JG: Matrix metalloproteinases regulate neutrophil-endothelial cell adhesion through generation of endothelin-1. FASEB J
2001;15:2230–2240.
Behzadian MA, Wang XL, Windsor LJ, Ghaly N, Caldwell RB: TGF-␤ increases retinal endothelial cell permeability by increasing MMP-9: possible role of glial cells in endothelial barrier function. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2001;42:853–859.
Libby RT, Lavallee CR, Balkema GW, Brunken WJ, Hunter DD: Disruption of laminin ␤2 chain production causes alterations in morphology and function in the CNS. J Neurosci 1999;19:9399–9411.
Lonai P: Epithelial mesenchymal interactions, the ECM and limb development. J Anat 2003;202:
43–50.
Libby RT, Champliaud MF, Claudepierre T, Xu Y, Gibbons EP, Koch M, Burgeson RE, Hunter
DD, Brunken WJ: Laminin expression in adult and developing retinae: evidence of two novel CNS
laminins. J Neurosci 2000;20:6517–6528.
Fukai N, Eklund L, Marneros AG, Oh SP, Keene DR, Tamarkin L, Niemela M, Ilves M, Li E,
Pihlajaniemi T, Olsen BR: Lack of collagen XVIII/endostatin results in eye abnormalities. EMBO J
2002;21:1535–1544.
Piecha D, Hartmann K, Kobbe B, Haase I, Mauch C, Krieg T, Paulsson M: Expression of matrilin2 in human skin. J Invest Dermatol 2002;119:38–43.
Schröder S, Palinski W, Schmidt-Schönbein GW: Activated monocytes and granulocytes, capillary nonperfusion, and neovascularization in diabetic retinopathy. Am J Pathol 1991;139:81–100.
Joussen AM, Murata T, Tsujikawa A, Kirchhof B, Bursell SE, Adamis AP: Leukocyte-mediated
endothelial cell injury and death in the diabetic retina. Am J Pathol 2001;158:147–152.
Joussen AM, Poulaki V, Mitsiades N, Cai WY, Suzuma I, Pak J, Ju ST, Rook SL, Esser P,
Mitsiades CS, Kirchhof B, Adamis AP, Aiello LP: Suppression of Fas-FasL-induced endothelial
cell apoptosis prevents diabetic blood-retinal barrier breakdown in a model of streptozotocininduced diabetes. FASEB J 2003;17:76–78.
Joussen AM, Poulaki V, Le ML, Koizumi K, Esser C, Janicki H, Schraermeyer U, Kociok N,
Fauser S, Kirchhof B, Kern TS, Adamis AP: A central role for inflammation in the pathogenesis of
diabetic retinopathy. FASEB J 2004;18:1450–1452.
Hirschi KK, Rohovsky SA, D’Amore PA: PDGF, TGF-␤, and heterotypic cell-cell interactions
mediate endothelial cell-induced recruitment of 10T1/2 cells and their differentiation to a smooth
muscle fate. J Cell Biol 1998;141:805–814.
Orlidge A, D’Amore PA: Inhibition of capillary endothelial cell growth by pericytes and smooth
muscle cells. J Cell Biol 1997;105:1455–1462.
Alt G, Lawrenson JG: Pericytes: cell biology and pathology. Cells Tissues Organs 2001;169:1–11.
Hattori K, Heissig B, Wu Y, Dias S, Tejada R, Ferris B, Hicklin DJ, Zhu Z, Bohlen P, Witte L,
Hendrikx J, Hackett NR, Crystal RG, Moore MA, Werb Z, Lyden D, Rafii S: Placental growth
factor reconstitutes hematopoiesis by recruiting VEGFR1(⫹) stem cells from bone-marrow
microenvironment. Nat Med 2002;8:841–849.
Rafii S, Lyden D, Benezra R, Hattori K, Heissig B: Vascular and haematopoietic stem cells: novel
targets for anti-angiogenesis therapy? Nat Rev Cancer 2002;2:826–835.
Grant MB, May WS, Caballero S, Brown GA, Guthrie SM, Mames RN, Byrne BJ, Vaught T,
Spoerri PE, Peck AB, Scott EW: Adult hematopoietic stem cells provide functional hemangioblast
activity during retinal neovascularization. Nat Med 2002;8:607–612.
Otani A, Kinder K, Ewalt K, Otero FJ, Schimmel P, Friedlander M: Bone marrow-derived stem
cells target retinal astrocytes and can promote or inhibit retinal angiogenesis. Nat Med 2002;8:
1004–1010.
Pathophysiology of Diabetic Edema
11
dramroo@Yahoo.com
59
60
61
Mathews V, Hanson PT, Ford E, Fujita J, Polonsky KS, Graubert TA: Recruitment of bone marrowderived endothelial cells to sites of pancreatic ␤-cell injury. Diabetes 2004;53:91–98.
Cardier JE, Schulte T, Kammer H, Kwak J, Cardier M: Fas (CD95-Apo-1) antigen expression and
function in murine liver endothelial cells: implications for the regulation of apoptosis in liver
endothelial cells. FASEB J 1999;13:1950–1960.
Walsh K, Sata M: Is extravasation a Fas-regulated process? Mol Med Today 1999;5:61–67.
Antonia M. Joussen
Department of Ophthalmology
Heinrich-Heine University Duesseldorf
Moorenstraße 5
DE–40225 Duesseldorf
Tel. ⫹49 0211 81 17321, Fax ⫹49 0211 81 16241, E-Mail joussena@googlemail.com
Joussen/Smyth/Niessen
12
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 13–30
Characterization and Relevance of
Different Diabetic Retinopathy
Phenotypes
José Cunha-Vaz
Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital of Coimbra,
Centre of Ophthalmology, Institute of Biomedical Research on Light and Image,
Faculty of Medicine, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal
Abstract
The natural history of initial lesions occurring in the diabetic retina has particular relevance for our understanding and management of diabetic retinal disease, one of the major
causes of vision loss in the Western world. Diabetic retinal lesions are still reversible at
the initial stage of mild nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy, opening real opportunities
for effective intervention. Four main alterations characterize the early stages of diabetic
retinopathy: microaneurysms/hemorrhages, alteration in the blood-retinal barrier, capillary
closure, and alterations in the neuronal and glial cells of the retina. These alterations may be
monitored by red dot counting on eye fundus images, by fluorescein methodologies and retinal thickness measurements. A combination of these methods through multimodal macula
mapping has contributed to the identification of three different phenotypes, showing different patterns of evolution: pattern A, including eyes with reversible and relatively little abnormal
fluorescein leakage, a slow rate of microaneurysm formation and normal foveal avascular
zones (FAZ); pattern B, including eyes with persistently high leakage values, high rates of
microaneurysm formation and normal FAZ; pattern C, including eyes with variable leakage,
high rates of microaneurysm formation and abnormal FAZ. The identification of different
phenotypes opens the door for genotype characterization, development of targeted treatments and personalized approaches in management strategy.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
The natural history of initial lesions occurring in the diabetic retina has
particular relevance for our understanding and management of diabetic retinal
disease, one of the major causes of vision loss in the Western world.
Four main alterations characterize the initial stages of diabetic retinopathy:
the appearance of microaneurysms/hemorrhages, alteration in the blood-retinal
dramroo@Yahoo.com
barrier (BRB) demonstrated by fluorescein leakage, capillary closure, and
alterations in the neuronal and glial cells of the retina. These alterations may be
monitored by a variety of methods, including retinal microaneurysm counting
on eye fundus images, fluorescein leakage, retinal thickness measurements and
psychophysical and electrophysiological testing.
A combination of these methods using multimodal imaging has contributed to identifying different phenotypes of diabetic retinopathy. They show
different types and rates of progression which suggest the involvement of different susceptibility genes. The identification of different phenotypes has
opened the door for genotype characterization, different management strategies
and targeted treatments.
A new paradigm of diabetic retinopathy management is developing.
Diabetic retinopathy must be detected and diagnosed earlier, and treatment
must be commenced earlier. The ultimate goal should not be merely to prevent
blindness, but to help patients enjoy their lives to their full potential, and to provide a clearer indication of when more active treatment, either systemic or
local, or both, is justified.
Diabetic retinopathy is a chronic retinal disorder that eventually develops,
to some degree, in nearly all patients with diabetes mellitus. Diabetic retinopathy is characterized by gradually progressive alterations in the retinal
microvasculature and is the leading cause of new cases of legal blindness
among Americans between the ages of 20 and 74 years of age [1].
Diabetic retinopathy occurs in both type 1 (also known as juvenile-onset or
insulin-dependent diabetes) and type 2 diabetes (also known as adult-onset or
noninsulin-dependent diabetes). All the features of diabetic retinopathy may be
found in both types of diabetes, but characteristically, the incidence of the main
causes of vision loss, macular edema and retinal neovascularization is quite different for each type of diabetes [1].
Diabetic retinopathy in type 1 diabetes induces vision loss mainly due to
the formation of new vessels in the eye fundus and development of proliferative
retinopathy, whereas in type 2 diabetes, vision loss is most commonly due to
macular edema, and proliferative retinopathy is relatively rare.
It is apparent from the data available from a variety of large longitudinal
studies that the evolution and progression of diabetic retinopathy vary according to the type of diabetes involved, showing dissimilarities among different
patients even when belonging to the same type of diabetes, and that diabetic
retinopathy does not necessarily progress in every patient to proliferative
retinopathy.
There is accumulated evidence indicating that only the nonproliferative
stage of diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) is directly due to the systemic disease
and associated hyperglycemia and other metabolic alterations. Proliferative
Cunha-Vaz
14
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Fig. 1. Diabetic retinopathy. Fundus photography of the posterior pole showing typical
alterations, predominantly microaneurysms and hemorrhages.
retinopathy occurs in diabetic eyes only after the development of widespread
ischemia due to capillary closure. Neovessels in the retina are a direct result of
retinal ischemia and not influenced by the diabetic metabolic control. Its course
and management are not different from other situations in the retina where there
is abnormal new vessel formation.
Following these concepts closely, we can state that in diabetes, a retinopathy develops that may ultimately result in extensive retinal ischemia. If that
occurs, independently of diabetic metabolic control, neovascularization may
develop. Proliferative retinopathy is, in fact, a complication of diabetic
retinopathy, such as retinal detachment in diabetes is a complication of proliferative retinopathy. Both occur independently of the course of systemic diabetic
disease and are not influenced by changes in metabolic control.
Therefore, we will attempt to characterize diabetic retinopathy, i.e. the
alterations occurring in the retina as a direct result of the systemic diabetic
disease.
The Initial Alterations in Diabetic Retinopathy
The fundus abnormalities that are identified on clinical examination of
mild to moderate NPDR include microaneurysms and/or hemorrhages, which
appear as small red dots on the fundus images, and exudates (fig. 1).
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
15
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Fig. 2. Diabetic retinopathy. Fluorescein angiography showing fluorescent dots
(microaneurysms) and diffusion of fluorescein around the lesions (fluorescein leakage).
Therefore, the initial stages of NPDR are characterized by the presence of
microaneurysms and indirect signs of vascular hyperpermeability and capillary
closure, i.e. both hard and soft exudates or cotton wool spots, respectively.
It is particularly important to realize that the course and rates of progression of the retinopathy vary between patients. Microaneurysms, for example,
may come and go. Once you get a microaneurysm you do not necessarily continue to have that microaneurysm. Microaneurysms may disappear due to vessel closure (fig. 2), which is an indication of worsening of the retinopathy
because of progressive vascular closure [2]. Hemorrhages will obviously come
and go as the body heals them. Clinical improvement may be apparent, but in
reality, may mask the worsening of the disease.
The initial pathological changes occurring in the diabetic retina are characteristically located in the small retinal vessels of the posterior pole of the retina, i.e. in
the macular area. The structural changes in the small vessels include endothelial
cell and pericyte damage and thickening of the basement membrane [3].
Pericyte damage has been reported as one of the earliest findings in diabetic
retinal disease since the introduction of retinal digest studies [4]. However, pericyte apoptosis is more readily detectable than endothelial cell apoptosis, most
probably because the pericytes are encased in the basement membrane and thus
less accessible to clearing mechanisms, whereas apoptotic endothelial cells
slough off into the capillary lumen and are cleared by blood flow.
The alteration in the Blood-Retinal Barrier (BRB) demonstrated by fluorescein leakage is one of the earliest findings in diabetic retinal disease (fig. 3).
Cunha-Vaz
16
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Fig. 3. Diabetic retinopathy. Fluorescein angiography showing multiple microaneurysms
and a few areas of capillary closure.
It appears to directly lead to clinically significant macular edema, which
remains the most frequent cause of visual loss in diabetes.
Altered autoregulation and progressively decreased retinal blood flow
associated with retinal vascular alterations (endothelial cells and pericytes)
facilitate the development of progressive capillary closure, a hallmark of progression of diabetic retinal disease. Capillary closure may be identified in the
initial stages of NPDR by the presence of occluded capillaries surrounding the
foveal vascular zone (FAZ). Finally, capillary closure leads to retinal ischemia,
which creates the conditions for the development of the most dreaded complications of proliferative retinopathy. It is now generally accepted that at least
three processes can contribute to retinal capillary occlusion and obliteration in
diabetes: proinflammatory changes, microthrombosis and apoptosis [5].
Characterization of Retinopathy Phenotypes
It is well recognized that the duration of diabetes and the level of metabolic
control are major risk factors for development of diabetic retinopathy.
However, these risk factors do not explain the great variability that characterizes the evolution and rate of progression of the retinopathy in different
diabetic individuals. There is clearly great individual variation in the presentation and course of diabetic retinopathy. There are many diabetic patients who
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
17
dramroo@Yahoo.com
after many years with diabetes never develop sight-threatening retinal changes,
maintaining good visual acuity. However, there are also other patients that even
after only a few years of diabetes show a retinopathy that progresses rapidly and
may not even respond to laser photocoagulation treatment.
We have recently performed a prospective 3-year follow-up study of the
macular region in 14 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and mild nonproliferative retinopathy, using multimodal macula mapping [6].
In a span of 3 years, eyes with minimal changes at the start of the study
(levels 20 and 35 of the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study-Wisconsin
grading) were followed at 6-month intervals in order to monitor progression of
the retinal changes.
The most frequent alterations observed, by decreasing order of frequency,
were leaking sites [7], areas of increased retinal thickness and microaneurysms/
hemorrhages.
Leaking sites were a very frequent finding and reached very high BRB
permeability values in some eyes. These sites of alteration in the BRB, well
identified in leakage maps, maintained, in most cases, the same location on successive examinations, but their BRB permeability values fluctuated greatly
between examinations, indicating reversibility of this alteration.
Areas of increased retinal thickness were another frequent finding. They
were present in every eye at some time during the follow-up and were absent, at
baseline, in only 2 of the 14 eyes. This confirms previous observations by our
group [6] and by others [8].
The number of microaneurysms and small hemorrhages increased in most
eyes during the 3-year follow-up period. This was particularly well demonstrated when the location of each microaneurysm was taken into consideration.
This increase in the number of microaneuryms may be the most reliable indicator of retinal vascular damage and remodeling of the retinal circulation, particularly in the initial stages of diabetic retinopathy.
Increased rates of microaneurysm accumulation were registered in eyes
that had more microaneuryms at baseline and higher values of BRB permeability during the study. In summary, in this study, the rate of microaneurysm formation appears to have the potential to be a good indicator of retinopathy
progression. We realized that by combining different imaging techniques,
multimodal imaging of the macula made apparent three major patterns occurring during the follow-up period of 3 years. Pattern A included eyes with
reversible and relatively little abnormal fluorescein leakage, a slow rate of
microaneurysm formation and a normal FAZ (fig. 4a). This group appeared to
represent eyes presenting slowly progressing retinal disease. Pattern B included
eyes with persistently high leakage values, indicating an important alteration in the
BRB, high rates of microaneurysm accumulation and a normal FAZ (fig. 4b).
Cunha-Vaz
18
dramroo@Yahoo.com
100
90
a
80
70
60
50
40
b
30
20
10
c
Fig. 4. Multimodal images taken at 0-, 12-, 24- and 36-month visits (left to right)
showing for each visit the FAZ (black contour), retinal leakage analyzer results and retinal
thickness analyzer results. The retinal leakage analyzer color-coded maps of the BRB permeability indexes are shown; retinal thickness analyzer views show white dot density maps
of the percent increases in retinal thickness. Pattern A: note the little amount of retinal leakage over the 4 represented visits and the normal FAZ contour. This patient showed a slow rate
of microaneurysm formation. Pattern B: note the high retinal leakage showing a certain
degree of reversibility and the normal FAZ contour. This patient showed a high rate of
microaneurysm accumulation over the 3-year follow-up period. Pattern C: note the reversible
retinal leakage and the development of an abnormal FAZ contour. This patient showed a high
rate of microaneurysm formation.
All these features suggest a rapid and progressive form of the disease. This
group may identify a ‘wet’ form of diabetic retinopathy. Pattern C included eyes
with variable and reversible leakage and an abnormal FAZ (fig. 4c). This group
is less well characterized considering the small number of eyes that showed an
abnormal FAZ. It may be that abnormalities of the FAZ may occur as a late development of groups A and B or progress rapidly as a specific ‘ischemic’form (table 1).
We have now extended our observations by following 57 patients with type
2 diabetes for 7 years; at the time of enrollment, all eyes presented mild NPDR.
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
19
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 1. Evolution of diabetic retinopathy
Pattern A (62%)
Pattern B (20%)
Pattern C (18%)
VF/RLA
Red dot
formation rate
FA/FAZ
Phenotype
⬍4 ng/ml
⬎4 ng/ml
⬍4 ng/ml
⬍3/year
⬎3/year
⬎3/year
normal
normal
abnormal
slow progression
leaky
ischemic
FA ⫽ Fluorescein angiography; RLA ⫽ retinal leakage analyzer; VF ⫽ vitreous fluorometry.
In this larger study, the three different phenotypes were again clearly identified
after an initial 2-year follow-up period. The discriminative markers of these
phenotypes were: microaneurysm formation rate, measurements of fluorescein
leakage, and signs of capillary closure in the capillaries surrounding the FAZ.
After an average of 7 years of follow-up, 10 of these 57 eyes had developed
clinically significant macular edema with clear indication for photocoagulation
treatment. In this series of patients, after the initial 2-year follow-up period,
35 eyes (61% of the total) were identified as showing the characteristics of
pattern A, i.e. slow progression, 12 (21%) were classified as presenting pattern
B, and the other 10 (18%) had the characteristics of pattern C.
Severe macular edema needing laser photocoagulation developed after
7 years of follow-up only in those eyes classified as belonging to patterns B and
C. Of the 12 eyes classified as having pattern B, 5 (42%) developed severe macular edema. Similarly, of the 10 eyes identified with pattern C, 5 (50%) developed severe macular edema.
None of the eyes classified as belonging to pattern A developed severe
macular edema in the 7-year follow-up period.
In summary, the slow progression type, pattern A, takes longer than 7 years to
develop severe macular edema, one of the main complications of diabetic retinopathy, confirming that this subtype of diabetic retinopathy has a good prognosis.
On the other hand, both other types of diabetic retinopathy progression, the
leaky type, or pattern B, characterized initially by particularly high levels of leakage, i.e. alteration in the BRB, and the ischemic type, or pattern C, characterized
by signs of capillary closure, much more frequently lead to the development of
severe macular edema needing photocoagulation, with incidences at 7 years of
42% and 50%, respectively.
If diabetic retinopathy is a multifactorial disease – in the sense that different factors or different pathways may predominate in different groups of cases
with diabetic retinopathy – then it is crucial that these differences and the
possible different phenotypes be identified [9]. The characterization of three
Cunha-Vaz
20
dramroo@Yahoo.com
different phenotypes of diabetic retinopathy, with different progression patterns, opens particularly interesting perspectives to gain more insight into the
understanding and management of diabetic retinopathy.
Diabetes mellitus is a familial metabolic disorder with strong genetic and
environmental etiology. Familial aggregation is more common in type 2 than in
type 1 diabetes. Rema et al. [10] reported that familial clustering of diabetic
retinopathy was three times higher in siblings of type 2 subjects with diabetic
retinopathy. Presence or absence of genetic factors may play a fundamental role in
determining specific pathways of vascular disease and, as a consequence, different
progression patterns of diabetic retinal disease. It could be that certain polymorphisms make the retinal circulation more susceptible to an early breakdown of the
BRB (pattern B) or induce microthrombosis and capillary closure (pattern C). The
absence of these specific genetic polymorphisms would lead to the pattern A.
It is clear from this study and from previous large studies, such as from the
Diabetes Control and Complications Trials group [11] and the UK Prospective
Diabetes Study [12], that hyperglycemia plays a determinant role in the progression of retinopathy. It is interesting to note that hemoglobin A1C (HbA1C)
levels are also largely genetically determined [13].
An interesting perspective of our observations, analyzed in the light of
available literature, depicts diabetic retinopathy as a microvascular complication of diabetes mellitus conditioned in its progression and prognosis by a variety of different genetic polymorphisms, and modulated in its evolution by
HbA1C levels, partly genetically determined and partly dependent on individual
diabetes management. The interplay of these multiple factors and the duration
of this interplay would finally characterize different clinical pictures or phenotypes of diabetic retinopathy.
Therefore, the ultimate goal should be the characterization of relationships
between genetic factors (represented by distinct genotypes) and their medically
significant expression (distinct diabetic retinopathy phenotypes). Our observations of prospective studies on eyes with mild NPDR of patients with type 2
diabetes mellitus suggest three different phenotypes of diabetic retinopathy: a
‘wet’ or ‘leaky’ type, an ‘ischemic’ type, and finally, an apparently more common, slow progression type.
Progression of Retinopathy under Stabilized Metabolic Control
It must be realized that levels of hyperglycemia and duration of diabetes,
i.e. exposure to hyperglycemia, influence the evolution and rate of progression
classified by our group into three major clinical phenotypes of retinopathy
progression.
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
21
dramroo@Yahoo.com
To determine the natural history of the initial alterations occurring in
the retina in subjects with type 2 diabetes under a situation of stable metabolic
control, our group performed a 2-year prospective study on eyes with mild nonproliferative retinopathy under intensive oral tritherapy [14].
In type 2 diabetes, very good levels of metabolic control may be achieved
using only oral administration of drugs, in the absence of insulin therapy, by
associating a sulphonylurea with a biguanide and an ␣-glucosidase inhibitor.
Since this was a condition for inclusion in the study, only patients who accepted
well the intensive oral tritherapy remained in the study. In this study, HbA1C levels were stabilized during the entire 2-year study period. Microaneurysm counts
on fundus photographs and retinal thickness measurements were determined
for each patient at 6-month intervals.
The number of microaneurysms increased steadily throughout the 2-year
study period in spite of the patients’ stabilized metabolic control, with more
microaneurysms counted in the eyes of patients with worse glucose control.
Microaneurysm formation rates during the 2-year study period varied
widely among different patients. There appeared to be individual microaneurysm formation rates that may be genetically determined and are basically
predetermined and independent of medical management, although influenced
by metabolic control. It was interesting to note that higher values of microaneurysm formation rates were registered in patients with higher HbA1C levels
both throughout the study and at baseline.
Finally, retinopathy continued to progress under well-stabilized metabolic
control indicating a role for genetic factors, but progression appears to accelerate in the eyes of patients under worse metabolic control.
Candidate Phenotype/Genotype Correlations
It is clear that hyperglycemia occurs in every patient with diabetes mellitus
and is a fundamental factor for the development of diabetic complications.
Several studies have provided evidence that good diabetes control is important
to prevent progression of diabetic retinopathy, but showed that some patients
develop a rapidly progressing retinopathy despite good control, while others
escape the development of severe retinopathy despite poor control.
The onset, intensity and progression of diabetic complications show large
interindividual variations [6, 15]. There is, indeed, clear evidence from aggregation in families and specific ethnic groups, together with a lack of serious
complications in some diabetic patients with poor metabolic control, that there
is a genetic predisposition to develop some diabetic complications such as
retinopathy [16].
Cunha-Vaz
22
dramroo@Yahoo.com
It is recognized that polymorphic variability in the genetic make-up of an
individual can profoundly influence the expression of a gene and its response
to environmental factors. As we predict that the impact of single common
mutations on diabetic retinopathy development will be modest (increasing relative risk by 20–40% at most), the main issue of clinical relevance is whether the
conferred risk of such a mutation is very much higher in some population subgroups. To be clinically useful in a risk algorithm we might require for any factor to have a relative risk of 2 or greater [17].
Such subgroups might be those carrying a second important mutation in
another gene, and such individuals might be identified using conventional
genetic strategies. Alternatively, one might identify individuals exposed to a
given environment which amplifies the risk associated with that gene (i.e. geneenvironment interaction).
Diabetic retinopathy shows familial aggregation and variation in disease
severity which is not explained by environmental, biochemical or biological
risk factors alone. There are, indeed, substantial variations in onset and severity
of retinopathy in different patients which are independent of the duration of diabetes and level of glycemic control.
One of the major problems is associated with poor characterization of different retinopathy phenotypes. It is fundamental before embarking on a search
for candidate genes to define clinical phenotypes characterized by specific patterns of severity and progression of diabetic retinopathy. It is clear that it is necessary to first and well identify the diabetic retinopathy phenotypes that are
associated with rapid progression of retinopathy to severe forms of the disease,
such as macular edema and proliferative retinopathy. Only then studies on candidate genes are worth pursuing, involving appropriately well-defined subgroups of patients [16].
The situation of a complex and multifactorial disease such as diabetes
favors the presence of gene-environment interactions. A key factor in the identification and study of gene-environment interaction is that an individual carrying such a mutation will develop the phenotype only if and when they enter the
high-risk environment. Thus, the mutation will cause a specific retinal vascular
alteration, i.e. an alteration in BRB or blood flow changes in the presence of a
specific environmental challenge. This classical ‘lack of penetrance’ of a mutation will cause analytical problems and misphenotyping which will be particularly problematic with some sampling analytical designs. This ‘content
dependency’ of a mutation (i.e. gene X environment effect) must be taken into
consideration when analyzing associations between a candidate gene polymorphism and intermediate phenotypes.
Most of the results published indicate the presence of genetic determinants
for resistance or susceptibility to vascular complications. However, there is
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
23
dramroo@Yahoo.com
evidence of problems in replicating results, suggesting that the studies performed have been plagued with confounding factors.
The results of our research group on the characterization of different
phenotypes of diabetic retinopathy confirm that there are distinct morphological
manifestations in diabetic retinopathy with different subjects presenting
different rates of progression and different evolution patterns [6]. There is
also evidence indicating that susceptibility to the late vascular complications of
diabetes, such as retinopathy, depends, at least partly, on genetic factors [18].
It is clear that future studies should focus on the need to characterize more
accurately different phenotypes with respect to retinopathy status. We agree
entirely with Wharpea and Chakravarthy [16] when they state that agreed international standards for data collection, particularly agreement on a minimum data set
for the phenotyping of retinopathy in subjects with diabetes, would permit the
pooling of data from the many studies with enhanced power to detect associations.
Relevance for Clinical Management
It is accepted that in the initial stages of diabetic retinopathy when the fundus alterations detected by ophthalmoscopy or slit-lamp examination are limited to microaneurysms, small hemorrhages and hard or soft exudates, i.e. mild
diabetic retinopathy or NPDR, an annual examination is indicated to every
patient with 5 or more years of duration of their diabetes.
This is the recommendation of the American Academy of Ophthalmology
Guidelines for Diabetic Retinopathy [19]. Our observations and the identification of different diabetic retinopathy phenotypes in the initial stages of diabetic
retinopathy, i.e. mild or moderate NPDR, characterized by different rates of
progression of the retinopathy, suggest that specific approaches should be used
when managing these different retinopathy phenotypes.
A patient with mild or moderate NPDR, presenting retinopathy phenotype
B (wet/leaky), characterized by a marked breakdown of the BRB, identified by
increased values of fluorescein leakage and a high microaneurysm formation
rate, registered during a period of 1–2 years of follow-up and indicating fast
retinopathy progression, should be watched more closely and examined at least
at 6-month intervals. Furthermore, blood pressure values and metabolic control
should be closely monitored at least at 3-month intervals and medication given
to keep HbA1C levels at ⬍7.1%, systolic blood pressure ⬍140 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure ⬍85 mm Hg. Communication channels should be rapidly
established between the ophthalmologist and the diabetologist, internist or
general health care provider. Information should be given indicating that the
chances of rapid retinopathy progression to more advanced stages of disease are
Cunha-Vaz
24
dramroo@Yahoo.com
in these patients relatively high, calling for immediate tighter control of both
glycemia and blood pressure.
A patient with mild or moderate NPDR presenting retinopathy phenotype
C, the ischemic type, characterized by clear signs of capillary closure and variable microaneurysm formation rates, would similarly indicate the need for
observation intervals less than 1 year, with particular attention to other systemic
signs of microthrombosis. However, here, control of hyperglycemia and blood
pressure must be addressed with some degree of caution. Improved metabolic
and blood pressure control must be progressive and less aggressive than with
phenotype B. It is realized that the ischemia that characterizes phenotype C may
become even more apparent in eyes submitted to rapid changes in metabolic
control, and rapidly lowering the blood pressure may increase the retinal damage associated with ischemia. Finally, a patient with mild or moderate NPDR,
presenting phenotype A, identified by low levels of fluorescein leakage, no
signs of capillary closure and low microaneurysm formation rates (all signs
indicating a slowly progression type of diabetic retinopathy), may be followed
at intervals longer than 1 year. If the examination performed at 2-year intervals
confirms the initial phenotype characterization, the patient and his diabetologist, internist or general health care provider should be informed of the good
prognosis associated with this retinopathy phenotype.
Targeted Treatments
It would be of great benefit to have a drug available which would prevent
the need for photocoagulation and particularly one which may remove the other
variables that remain a cause of concern. Thus, many patients remain poorly controlled and do not come to the doctor regularly, often losing their vision before
they get medical attention in time for photocoagulation. The major large clinical
trials have shown that tight glycemic control slows the development and progression of diabetic retinopathy. However, the constantly increasing incidence of
type 2 diabetes and the evidence that retinal damage begins early on underscore
the need for a medical treatment that is targeted to the initial retinal alterations
and to specific phenotypes of the retinal diabetic disease. Several key pathways
have been shown to be involved in the process of triggering diabetic retinal disease and they may play specific roles in the development of specific retinopathy
phenotypes. Four candidates, the polyol pathway, nonenzymatic glucosylation,
growth factors and protein kinase C, are considered to play leading roles in the
development of diabetic retinal disease. The polyol pathway theory holds that
increased glucose metabolism, through the enzyme aldose reductase interferes
with sodium-potassium ATPase, damaging the retina [20].
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
25
dramroo@Yahoo.com
The nonenzymatic glycosylation theory holds that the bonding of sugar
molecules to other reactive molecules leads to critical retinal alterations and
enhancement of processes of oxidative stress to the retina [21].
In the growth factor hypothesis, diabetes-induced damage promotes the
liberation of growth factors that appear clearly as the best candidates to explain
the developments of proliferative retinopathy. However, the potential role of
growth factors in the initial stages and in nonproliferative retinopathy remains
highly hypothetical [22].
Finally, many of the metabolic changes associated with hyperglycemiainduced oxidative stress, advanced glycosylation end products of diacylglycerol
through the polyol pathway, ultimately activate protein kinase C. In the retina,
there is evidence that activation of the ␤-isoform of protein kinase C is associated with retinal vasodilatation, leakage and alterations in retinal blood flow,
thus making the ␤-isoform of protein kinase C an obvious target for intervention [23].
A role for inflammation has also been proposed, and inflammation mediators have been suggested to be responsible for the increased fluorescein leakage
observed in the initial stages of diabetes by causing alterations in the tight junctions of the retinal vessels [24]. Leukocyte adhesion may play an important role
in retinal microthrombosis and capillary closure [25].
It is possible that all these different mechanisms of disease play complementary roles in the progression of diabetic retinal disease. The identification of
different retinopathy phenotypes, characterized by different rates of progression
and different dominant retinal alterations, may indicate that different disease
processes predominate in specific retinopathy phenotypes, probably determined
by specific gene mutations. Individuals with a specific gene mutation which
makes them more susceptible to the abnormal metabolic environment of diabetes
will respond by developing a specific retinopathy phenotype. Identification of
well-defined retinopathy phenotypes appears to be an essential step in the quest
for a successful treatment of diabetic retinopathy. After the characterization of
specific retinopathy phenotypes, the predominant disease mechanisms involved
may be identified, and drugs directly targeted at the correction of these disease
mechanisms may be used with greater chances of success (fig. 5).
Determining Risk in the Individual Patient:
Preventative Ophthalmology
It is clear now that only a subset of patients with diabetes who develop
some form of retinopathy is expected to lose functional vision during their
lifetime.
Cunha-Vaz
26
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Evolution of diabetic retinopathy
Diabetes
metabolic dysfunction
Genetic factors
promotiong vascular disease
HbA1C
Vasodilatation
Endothelial/pericyte
dysfunction
+blood
pressure
Slow progressive type
Pattern A
Capillary thrombi
formation
+blood
pressure
+blood
pressure
Hyperpermeability
alteration in BRB
Capillary closure
Wet/leaky type
Ischemic type
Pattern B
Pattern C
Fig. 5. Schematic development of NPDR leading to the three different patterns proposed: patterns A, B and C.
Identification of risk factors for progression to visual loss, precise calculations of the risk of progression to visual impairment in individual patients over
given time periods, finally appears to be within attainable reach. This knowledge is crucial to decide which patients to treat, when to initiate treatment and
how vigorously.
A method of assessing the risk of progression for mild NPDR to severe
macular edema and loss of functional vision for individual patients is clearly
needed.
A successful global risk assessment model that evaluates total disease risk
based on the summation of major risk factors has been used for many years in
the management of patients with cardiovascular disease. Eventually, a point
system was established to facilitate assessment of an individual global risk of
progression to an atherosclerotic cardiovascular event.
More recently, Weinberg et al. [26] have initiated an attempt to establish
estimates for glaucoma risk assessment.
Diabetic retinopathy is a microvascular complication of diabetes mellitus
that presents to the practitioner at various stages of a continuum that is characterized by accelerated retinal vascular changes involving also the neuronal and
glial retinal tissue with eventual development of severe macular edema and/or
abnormal retinal or optic disk neovascularization leading to irreversible functional visual loss.
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
27
dramroo@Yahoo.com
t
eas
Slow
progre
s s iv e v a s c
ular and neuroglial degener
A l t e r a ti o n s
in BRB (FA, RLA) – h
B
C
ation
ard exu
d ate s
– ma
cula
r ed
em
a–
ic
pr
oli
fe
ra
tiv
e
(p
ho
to
al
im
re
en
t
or
lo
ss
)
e
ag
rrh
mo
(he
Hyperglycemia
(environment)
ro
n
ion
pt
Activating
susceptibility genes
ch
irm
rombosis – soft exudat
es – i
Microth
sche
mia
(FA
Z-F
A,
ER
G)
–
Fu
nc
t
ce
Cli
ni
A
hy
at
op
tin
re
Acceleration of
apoptosis
Normal
e
Endothelial and
pericyte damage
ca
ll
de
c
te
l
ab
is
ed
pa
yu
n
Asymptomatic disease
)
ent
hm
tac
de
Fig. 6. Continuum of the progression of diabetic retinopathy. ERG ⫽ Electroretinography;
FA ⫽ fluorescein angiography; RLA ⫽ retinal leakage analyzer.
The initial changes in the retina are often asymptomatic and undetectable
with existing diagnostic tests. There is still no complete agreement on criteria
for the diagnosis of early damage that predicts visual function loss.
This suggests that waiting for overt signs of disease involves accepting
some irreversible damage and probable progression. As the disease progresses,
severe visual dysfunction and blindness will occur only in a small group of
patients. Since many patients may be examined in the early stages of the disease, the goal of treatment must be to arrest delay or limit progression of predisposing retinal vascular damage to significant visual impairment.
The continuum of diabetic retinopathy progression may be represented as
depicted in figure 6, taking into consideration the three proposed diabetic
retinopathy phenotypes: slow progression, wet/leaky and ischemic type.
Different individuals with diabetes clearly have different rates of progression,
and these must be identified and taken into account.
The wealth of available epidemiological data, particularly the studies performed within the context of the Wisconsin Epidemiological Study of Diabetic
Retinopathy should be looked at with the aim of determining the risk in the
individual patient.
Development of a method to assess patients based on summation of all the
major risk factors will allow patients who are most likely to benefit from treatment
to be identified and quantify the combined effect of the risk factors that practitioners should consider in making treatment decisions. In addition, the risks and
benefits of various modalities should be considered in making such treatment
decisions [26].
Cunha-Vaz
28
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Consolidation and analysis of cardiovascular risk factors from large patient
data sets have led to the development of predictive algorithms that allow physicians to estimate individual patient risk of suffering an atherosclerotic cardiovascular event [27]. Similarly, an algorithm that would allow ophthalmologists
to use a patient’s microaneurysm formation rate and other risk factors, such as
retinal thickness progression and HbA1C levels, i.e. a so-called ‘risk calculator’,
to estimate the risk of visual impairment for a diabetic patient, would certainly
facilitate the standardization of treatment and help in determining appropriate
treatment for individual patients.
As in the cardiovascular model, a calculator would be a valuable adjunct to,
and not a substitute for, experience and judgment of a well-trained physician.
Finally, it is clear that identifying individual variations in disease progression by characterizing the diabetic retinopathy phenotype of each individual
patient and other modulating risk factors such as HbA1C levels may open completely new perspectives for the management of diabetic retinal disease. If the
patients with the greatest risk of progression and with the greatest potential to
benefit from treatment can be identified by multivariate risk assessment, fewer
patients will need to be treated to prevent 1 case of blindness. This is of
extreme importance at a time where scarce resources must be focused and concentrated on the few individual cases that need close follow-up and timely
treatment.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Aiello LP, Gardner TW, King GL, Blankenship G, Cavallerano JD, Ferris FL 3rd, Kein R: Diabetic
retinopathy. Diabetes Care 1998;21:143–156.
Cunha-Vaz JG: Perspectives in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes Metab Rev
1992;8:105–116.
Cunha-Vaz JG: Pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy. Br J Ophthalmol 1978;62:351–355.
Cogan DG, Kwabara T: Capillary shunts in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes
1963;12:293–300.
Gardiner TW, Aiello LP: Pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy; in Flynn HW Jr, Smiddy WE (eds):
Diabetes and Ocular Disease: Past, Present, and Future Therapies. AAO Monogr No 14. San
Francisco, The Foundation of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, 2000, pp 1–17.
Lobo CL, Bernardes RC, Figueira JP, Faria de Abreu JR, Cunha-Vaz JG. Three-year follow-up of
blood-retinal barrier and retinal thickness alterations in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and
mild nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy. Arch Ophthalmol 2004;122:211–217.
Lobo CL, Bernardes RC, Santos FJ, Cunha-Vaz JG: Mapping retinal fluorescein leakage with confocal scanning laser fluorometry of the human vitreous. Arch Ophthalmol 1999;117:631–637.
Fritsche P, Van der Heijde R, Suttorp-Schulten MSA, Pollack BC: Retinal thickness analysis
(RTA). An objective method to assess and quantify the retinal thickness in healthy controls and
diabetics without diabetic retinopathy. Retina 2002;22:768–771.
Grange JD: Retinopathie Diabétique. Rapport à la Société Française d’Ophthalmologie. Paris,
Masson, 1995.
Rema M, Saravanan G, Deepa R, Mohan V: Familial clustering of diabetic retinopathy in South
Indian Type 2 diabetic patients. Diabet Med 2002;19:910–916.
Diabetic Retinopathy Phenotypes
29
dramroo@Yahoo.com
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
Diabetes Control and Complications Trials Group: Effect of intensive therapy on the microvascular complications of type 1 diabetes mellitus. JAMA 2002;287:2563–2569.
Stratton IM, Kohner EM, Aldington SJ, Turner RC, Holman RR, Manley SE, Matthews DR, the
UKPDS Group: UKPDS 50: risk factors for incidence and progression of retinopathy in type II
diabetes over 6 years from diagnosis. Diabetologia 2001;44:156–163.
Snieder H, Sawtell PA, Ross L, Walker J, Spector TD, Leslie RDG: HbA1c levels are genetically
determined even in type 1 diabetes. Evidence from healthy and diabetic twins. Diabetes 2001;50:
2858–2863.
Ribeiro ML, Seres AI, Carneiro AM, Stur M, Zourdani A, Caillon P, Cunha-Vaz JG and on behalf
of the DX-Retinopathy Study Group: Effect of calcium dobesilate on progression of early diabetic
retinopathy: a randomised double-blind study. Grafe’s Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2006;
DOI 10.1007/s00417-006-0318-2.
Rogus JJ, Warram JH, Krolewski AS: Genetic studies of late diabetic complications: the overlooked importance of diabetes duration before complication onset. Diabetes 2002;51:1655–1662.
Warpeha KM, Chakravarthy U: Molecular genetics of microvascular disease in diabetic retinopathy. Eye 2003;17:305–311.
Humphries SE, Talmud PH, Montgomery H: Gene-environment interaction: lipoprotein lipase and
smoking and risk of CAD and the ACE and exercise-induced left ventricular hypertrophy as
examples; in Malcom S, Gooship J (eds): Genotype to Phenotype. Oxford, Bios Scientific, 2001,
pp 55–72.
Wasgenknecht LE, Bowden DW, Carr JJ, Langefeld CD, Freedman BI, Rich SS: Familial aggregation of coronary artery calcium in families with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes 2001;50:861–866.
Fong DS, Ferris F: Practical management of diabetic retinopathy. Focal Point 2003;21:1–17.
Greene DA, Lattimer SA, Sima AAF: Sorbitol, phosphoinositides, and sodium-potassium-ATPase
in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications. N Engl J Med 1987;316:599–606.
Brownlee M: Glycation and diabetic complications (Lilly lecture 1993). Diabetes 1994;43:836–841.
Clermont AC, Aiello LP, Mori F, Aiello LM, Bursell SE: Vascular endothelial growth factor and
severity of nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy mediate retinal hemodynamics in vivo: a potential
role for vascular endothelial growth factor in the progression of nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy. Am J Ophthalmol 1997;124:433–436.
Ishii H, Jirousek MR, Koya D, Takagi C, Xia P, Clermont A, Bursell SE, Kern TS, Ballas LM,
Heath WF, Stramm LE, Feener EP, King GL: Amelioration of vascular dysfunctions in diabetic
rats by an oral PKC X inhibitor. Science 1996;272:728–731.
Antonetti DA, Barber AJ, Khin S, Lieth E, Tarbell JM, Gardner TW, Penn State Retina Research
Group: Vascular permeability in experimental diabetes is associated with reduced endothelial
occluding content: vascular endothelial growth factor decreases occludin in retinal endothelial
cells. Diabetes 1998;47:1953–1959.
Adamis AP: Is diabetic retinopathy an inflammatory disease? Br J Ophthalmol 2002;86:363–365.
Weinberg RN, Friedman DS, Fechtner RD, et al: Risk assessment in the management of patient
with ocular hypertension. Am J Opthalmol 2004;138:458–467.
Wilson PWF, D’Agostino RB, Levy D, Belanger AM, Silbershatz H, Kannel WB: Prediction of
coronary heart disease using risk factor categories. Circulation 1998;97:1837–1847.
José Cunha-Vaz, MD, PhD
AIBILI
Azinhaga Santa Comba, Celas
PT–3000-548 Coimbra (Portugal)
Tel. ⫹351 239480100, Fax ⫹351 239480117, E-Mail cunhavaz@aibili.pt
Cunha-Vaz
30
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 31–47
Optical Coherence Tomography Findings
in Diabetic Retinopathy
Gabriele E. Lang
Augenklinik, Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Ulm, Germany
Abstract
Ophthalmoscopy, fundus photography and fluorescein angiography are the common
tools to diagnose diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema. However, there is an
increasing demand for high-resolution imaging of ocular tissues to improve the diagnosis
and management of diabetic retinopathy. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) provides
important additional information about the retina. It produces reliable, reproducible and
objective retinal images especially in diabetic macular edema and provides information
about vitreoretinal relationships that can clearly only be detected with OCT. It enhances the
ability to exactly diagnose diabetic macular edema, epiretinal membranes, vitreomacular or
vitroretinal traction. OCT also brings new insights into morphological changes of the retina
in diabetic retinopathy. It demonstrates that macular edema is a complex clinical entity with
various morphology. With the OCT, structural changes and quantitative assessment of macular edema have become feasible as determined with retinal thickness and volume. OCT is
more sensitive to small changes in retinal thickness than slit-lamp biomicroscopy.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
There is an increasing demand for high-resolution imaging of ocular tissues in the diagnosis and management of ocular diseases. Especially the diagnosis of retinal disorders has been dramatically improved by the introduction of
optical coherence tomography (OCT).
The Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study has defined the stages of
diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema on clinical grounds and by
stereoscopic fundus photography. Fluorescein angiography provides important
information about retinal perfusion, disturbances of the blood-retinal barrier
and neovascularization. Recently, a new tool has been developed to gather
additional information of the retina. OCT is a modern diagnostic imaging technique to examine living tissue noninvasively by means of high-resolution
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Nerve fiber layer
Inner plexiform layer
Outer plexiform layer
Inner photoreceptor layer
Outer photoreceptor layer
Retinal pigment epithelium
Choroid
Fig. 1. OCT of a normal macula.
Table 1. OCT potentials in image analysis
OCT enables to detect
Morphological changes
Retinal thickness
Retinal volume
Surface area
OCT allows image analysis
Qualitative analysis
Quantitative analysis
Reflectivity
Comparison of images obtained during subsequent examinations
Follow the disease course
Intervention studies
tomographic cross-sections of the retina. OCT measurements are similar to
those of ultrasound B-mode examination. OCT can provide important information complementary to clinical examination and fluorescein angiography for
certain findings in diabetic retinopathy.
OCT Techniques and Principles
OCT is based on the analysis of the reflections of low coherence radiation
from the tissue. The resolution with current clinically used instrumentation is
10 ␮m. It allows images to be obtained for the retinal, retinal pigment epithelial
and choriocapillary layers (fig. 1). OCT potentials in image analysis enable to
detect morphological changes, quantitative and qualitative analysis (table 1).
With OCT qualitative analysis, one can differentiate between hyperreflectivity,
hyporeflectivity and shadowing effects (table 2).
The possibility to make repeatable, high-resolution measurements of the
retina with good image quality is important for the diagnosis, follow-up and
Lang
32
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 2. OCT qualitative interpretation
Hyperreflective
Hard exudates
Cotton wool spots
Hyporeflective
Intraretinal edema
Exudative retinal detachment
Cystoid macular edema
Shadow effect
Hemorrhages
Exudates
Retinal vessels
treatment of diabetic retinopathy. OCT of the posterior pole can be performed
through a pupil as small as 3 mm in diameter. Mydriasis, however, makes the
OCT examination easier. The OCT software, the latest version of Zeiss Stratus
OCT is version 4, offers different scanning protocols. For diagnosis of diabetic
maculopathy, fast macular thickness allows quantitative and qualitative analysis
for the diagnosis and follow-up of diabetic retinopathy. The scans of the macular
thickness mode require more time for the scan acquisition, but provide more
detailed information of the six 6-mm-long radial scans. If the fixation is bad, an
X-line mode can be chosen, because it can be taken in less than 2 s. For proliferative changes, single linear scans are recommended. While the scans are
being taken, the position of the signal in the display window can be adjusted
either automatically or manually to optimize the signal strength [1].
The images are displayed directly on the monitor in real time using a false
color or gray scale that represents the degree of light reflected from tissues at
different depths in the retina. The images are then saved and an analysis protocol can be selected. The software can map the thickness and volume of the macular region, based on six 6-mm-long radial scans. The scans are performed with
intersections in the foveolar region. Each scan is rotated by 30⬚ in relation to the
preceding one. At each of these locations, the signal is sampled longitudinally
at 1,024 equal intervals over a depth of 2 mm. The macular retinal map divides
the region into a central disc with a radius of 500 microns and 2 concentric
rings divided into 4 quadrants. The normal retina in the macular region has a
mean thickness of 200–250 microns, and the physiological foveal depression
has a mean thickness of 170 microns. In the false color scale, blue is assigned to
thickness between 150 and 210 microns, green to 210–270 microns, yellow to
270–320 microns, orange to 320–350 microns, red to 350–470 microns, and
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
33
Table 3. Retinal thickness measured by OCT [2]
Retinal thickness
Fovea
Normal
Borderline
Edema
150 ⫾ 20 ␮m
170–210 ␮m
⬎210 ␮m
Central zone (1.0 mm in diameter)
Normal
Borderline
Edema
170 ⫾ 20 ␮m
190–230 ␮m
⬎230 ␮m
Perifoveal and peripheral areas
Normal
Borderline
Edema
230 ⫾ 20 ␮m
250–290 ␮m
⬎290 ␮m
Volume
Normal
Boderline
Abnormal
6.5 ⫾ 1 mm3
up to 8.0 mm3
⬎8.0 mm3
white to over 470 microns. Panozzo et al. [2] have provided detailed thickness
and volume measurements of a normal subject database (table 3). The normal
foveal thickness is 150 ⫾ 20 ␮m. Retinal thickness can be classified as normal,
borderline and edema [2].
When interpreting the OCT, one should always look at the original scans as
well, in addition to the different image processing techniques. The alignment
algorithm reduces the artifacts caused by axial movement of the eye during the
scan acquisition phase. When using the algorithms, it is very important to take
into account that the possibility of interpretation errors exists, because the software cannot always distinguish between the retinal variations resulting from
ocular movements and the morphological variations. Consequently, there is
always the possibility of misestimation when using the algorithms. The normalization algorithm eliminates the saturation points of the signal, redistributing the
acquired values over the entire available range of false colors. This algorithm
allows to compare scans with different signal strengths. Gaussian smoothing of
the scales allows to evaluate data on a broad scale, at the expense of details.
The median smoothing function applies the median value of points in the same
3 ⫻ 3 mm area, thereby eliminating background noise while minimizing the loss
of important details. A normal subject database is available for macular retinal
thickness [1].
Lang
34
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 4. OCT findings typical for macular edema
Retinal thickening
Cystoid macular edema
Loss of foveal depression
Detachment of the neurosensory retina
Epiretinal membrane
Pseudohole formation
Vitreomacular and vitreoretinal traction
Preretinal neovascularization
Retinal thinning
Secondary epiretinal membrane
OCT can be difficult or impossible to perform in patients with opacification of the cornea, lens or vitreous and in patients that cannot fixate.
The analysis of the OCT has to be done in two steps, qualitative (morphology,
reflectivity) and quantitative, and then results in the synthesis leading to the
diagnosis together with the clinical and, if necessary, angiographic correlation.
In the normal retina, the nerve fibers and retinal pigment epithelium are highly
reflective, the plexiform and nuclear layers are medium reflective and the photoreceptors are low reflective (fig. 1).
There is no significant difference in foveal thickness concerning age and
right and left eye. However, men have a greater thickness than women (central
area for men, 178 ⫾ 17 ␮m; central area for women, 165 ⫾ 17 ␮m) [3]. The
retina is thinner in the temporal areas in comparison with the nasal, superior
and inferior areas because of the arciform bunching of the optic nerve fibers.
The information provided by OCT has markedly improved our understanding of diabetic retinopathy. OCT allows to detect macular edema, cystoid maculopathy, hard exudates, intra- and preretinal hemorrhages, cotton wool spots,
epiretinal membranes (ERMs), and vitreomacular traction.
OCT Findings in Macular Edema
OCT makes it possible to detect, quantify and classify diabetic macular
edema (table 4) and get additional important information to ophthalmoscopy
and fluorescein angiography.
Macular edema is a common cause of decreased vision in patients with
diabetic retinopathy and can occur in any stage of the disease.
The pathogenesis of diabetic macular edema is still not fully understood.
Cytotoxic macular edema is initiated by intracytoplasmic swelling of Müller
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
35
cells due to ischemia. It may progress to a vasogenic edema with the release of
permeability factors such as prostaglandins and vascular endothelial growth
factor [4]. The liquefaction necrosis of the Müller cells and adjacent neural
cells due to persisting edema and ischemia leads to cystoid cavity formation
predominantly in the outer retinal layer. The breakdown of the blood-retinal
barrier leads to accumulation of fluid in the retinal cystoid spaces. Some edema
may also result from abnormalities in the retinal pigment epithelium, which
allows increased fluid from the choriocapillaris to pass through into the sensory
retina. Vitreous traction can also play a role in the development of diabetic
macular edema in some patients.
Edema within 1 disc diameter of the center of the macula is found in about
9% of the diabetic population, 40% of whom have central macular involvement
[5]. The proportion of patients with macular edema increases with the severity
of overall retinopathy: 3% in mild nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy, 38% in
moderate to severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy, and 71% in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Older-onset diabetic patients are more likely to have
visual impairment due to macular edema: 50% of older-onset compared with
20% of younger-onset diabetics [6].
Macular edema can be divided into focal and diffuse edema and cystoid
maculopathy. In focal edema, OCT scans detect areas of thickened and hyporeflective retina (fig. 2). The edema can be located in the single scans and by retinal
mapping and quantified by retinal thickness and volume mode. The map allows to
locate the edema with great precision. OCT has been demonstrated to be more
sensitive than biomicroscopy in detecting small changes in retinal thickness and
morphology, especially in cases of mild cystoid macular edema [7].
Otani et al. [8] suggested three OCT patterns of diffuse diabetic macular
edema: sponge-like swelling, cystoid macular edema and serous retinal detachment. In diffuse macular edema, the retina is becoming thicker and less reflective, with numerous small, irregular cavities reminiscent of spongy fabric (fig. 3).
When the retina becomes thicker, the foveal depression finally disappears (fig. 4).
If retinal edema persists, necrosis of the Müller cells occurs, leading to cystoid
cavities in the retina also visible on OCT. The cavities often start in the external
plexiform layer (fig. 3b). When cystoid maculopathy progresses, the walls of
the pseudocysts disappear forming larger confluent cystoid cavities. Finally,
cystoid maculopathy can involve the full thickness of the retina with atrophy of
the retinal tissues, showing hyporeflective cavities on OCT (fig. 5).
However, diabetic macular edema can also be caused by serous fluid
that accumulates under the neurosensory retina leading to a serous detachment of the macula which usually does not show on biomicroscopy and
fluorescein angiography [9]. It can be detected by OCT showing a hyporeflective area under the macula elevating the neurosensory retina. Serous foveolar
Lang
36
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
Fig. 2. a Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy with numerous cotton wool spots and
clinically significant diabetic macular edema with hard exudates. Arrow indicates scanline.
b Diffuse diabetic macular edema with hyporeflective serous detachment of the neurosensory retina (arrows), high reflective hard exudates (arrowhead) in the deeper retinal layers
shadowing the posterior layers, and hyperreflective cotton wool spot (asterisk).
retinal detachment is reported in up to 15% of diabetic patients [6]. The visual
acuity significantly correlates with central foveal thickness measured by
OCT [10].
Patients with fovea-involving macular edema show an overnight increase in
retinal thickness of about 20 ␮m accompanied by a reduction in visual acuity
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
37
a
b
Fig. 3. a Cystoid diabetic macular edema with hard exudates. Arrow indicates scanline.
b OCT shows cystoid diabetic macular edema with hyporeflective cystoid cavities (arrows)
and high reflective hard exudates (arrowhead) in the deeper retinal layers shadowing the posterior layers.
being directly related to the nocturnal change in blood pressure, indicating a deficient regulation of retinal capillary filling pressure that promotes edema [11].
Yang et al. [7] found a significant correlation between OCT and fluorescein angiography in clinically significant macular edema. They suggested to
categorize clinically significant macular edema into four types: type 1, thickening of the fovea with homogenous optical reflectivity throughout the whole
layer of the retina; type 2, thickening of the fovea with markedly decreased optical reflectivity in the outer retinal layer; type 3, thickening of the fovea with
subfoveal fluid accumulation and distinct outer border of detached retina,
Lang
38
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
c
d
Fig. 4. a Macular edema in diabetic retinopathy. b OCT showing diffuse macular
edema with hyporeflective retina, loss of foveal depression and some cystoid cavities. c Early
frame of the fluorescein angiography shows microaneurysms, hemorrhages and ischemic
maculopathy with enlarged foveal avascular zone. d Late frame shows ischemic and cystoid
maculopathy.
a
b
Fig. 5. a Cystoid macular edema in diabetic retinopathy. b OCT shows large and small
hyporeflective cystoid cavities.
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
39
including type 3A, without vitreofoveal traction, and type 3B, with vitreofoveal
traction. They found that the prevalence of OCT type 1 was higher in diabetic
macular edema with focal leakage type and in the diffuse type than in the diffuse cystoid leakage type of fluorescein angiography. The prevalence of OCT
types 2 and 3A was higher in the diffuse cystoid leakage type than in the focal
type or diffuse leakage type. OCT type 1 and the focal leakage type of fluorescein angiography showed the least foveal thickness and the best visual acuity
[7]. Types 2 and 3A increased with the existence of retinal vascular hyperpermeability. The external limiting membrane is not impermeable to fluid and
albumin. With the disruption of the blood-retinal barrier, the excessive fluid
might reach the subretinal space in large amounts, which cannot be removed by
retinal pigment epithelium and may result in subvofeal detachment. Foveal
detachment may lead to cystoid foveal changes. The proportion of diffuse leakage and diffuse cystoid leakage type of macular edema increases with proliferative diabetic retinopathy in comparison with nonproliferative diabetic
retinopathy. This suggests that the large extent of ischemia in the eyes with proliferative diabetic retinopathy releases endogenous growth factors like vascular
endothelial growth factor, which results in the breakdown of the blood-retinal
barrier, and causes diffuse leakage from damaged capillaries [4].
Significant differences in retinal thickness between patients with diabetic
retinopathy without clinically significant macular edema and controls can be
detected by OCT, most likely in the superior nasal quadrant [12].
An excellent agreement between OCT and contact lens examination for the
absence or presence of foveal edema is found when OCT thickness is normal
(ⱕ200 ␮m) or moderately to severely increased (⬎300 ␮m). However, agreement is poor when foveal thickness is mildly increased on OCT (201–300 ␮m)
[13]. This suggests that OCT is more sensitive to the detection of mild foveal
thickening than slit-lamp biomicroscopy.
Lattanzio et al. [5] found that macular thickness was greater in diabetics
than in controls and tended to increase with diabetic retinopathy and macular
edema severity.
OCT is also a sensitive technique for quantifying treatment effects like
reduction in macular thickness after laser photocoagulation. The change in
macular profile and the internal retinal structure after laser photocoagulation of
surgical treatment are well visible with OCT [14]. Diabetic macular edema can
be accurately and prospectively measured with OCT [15]. In a multivariate
logistic regression model, foveal thickness is a strong and independent predictor of clinically significant macular edema [16] suggesting that foveal thickness
⬎180 ␮m measured by OCT may be useful for the early detection of macular
thickening and may be an indicator for a closer follow-up of the patients with
diabetes mellitus.
Lang
40
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
c
d
Fig. 6. a Retinal thickness of the macular thickness mode of a patient with diabetes
mellitus. b Retinal thickness of the fast macular mode of the same patient showing a thickened macula in the parafoveal area (normal thickness, gray area). c Retinal thickness of the
macular thickness mode of a patient with cystoid macular edema showing markedly thickened macula and loss of foveal depression. d Retinal thickness of the fast macular mode of
the same patient.
OCT allows to quantify retinal thickness in diabetic retinopathy with
excellent reproducibility and is able to detect sight-threatening macular edema
with great reliability [17]. Retinal thickness can be obtained either by the macular thickness mode or by the fast macular mode, which provides an agematched normal subject database (fig. 6). For fast-scan retinal thickness,
measurements are taken at 128 points in each scan, for a total of 78 transverse
points, 6 of which intersect at the fovea. Thus, the measurements are more precise at the center than at the periphery of the map. For macular thickness map
scan, the retinal thickness measurements are taken at 512 points in each scan by
default, but this number can be adjusted to 256 or 128 per scan line. The mean
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
41
a
b
Lang
42
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Cotton wool spots are ischemic infarctions of the nerve fiber layer. On
ophthalmoscopy, they are white and located superficially. On OCT, they appear
as hyperreflective, nodular or elongated lesions in the nerve fiber layer, which
can cast a shadow on the posterior layers (fig. 2).
Hemorrhages can be located pre-, intra- or subretinally. On ophthalmoscopy, they are flame shaped when located in the nerve fiber layer, and they
are rounded or irregular when located in the deep retinal layers. They are hyperreflective on OCT and can produce a shadow cone on the posterior layer, especially if they are located preretinally (fig. 8a–e).
OCT Findings in Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy,
Vitreoretinal Traction and ERMs
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy is characterized by either neovascularization on the disc or elsewhere [19]. Preretinal neovascularization can be detected
by OCT when a certain amount of fibroglial tissue is present, showing medium
reflective preretinal structures shadowing the posterior layers (fig. 8a, c, d).
Vitreous hemorrhage, when it is not too severe, shows preretinal high reflective
structures shadowing the retinal layers. If vitreous hemorrhage is more severe,
no good reflection can be obtained from retinal structures.
On clinical grounds, it is often difficult to detect vitreomacular or vitreoretinal traction, when caused by partial vitreous detachment. The posterior
hyaloid surface is visible as mid-reflective band inserted in the retina creating
traction and resulting in retinal edema. In vitreomacular traction, a thin slightly
hyperreflective band is visible adhering to the retina, sometimes at several
points to the retinal surface, which is often elevated (fig. 9a, b).
OCT can also detect traction-induced retinal detachment, which can occur
in proliferative diabetic vitreoretinopathy. OCT accurately reveals the fibrovascular tissue, the points of traction and the detached retina.
In patients with diabetic retinopathy, secondary ERMs can develop
because of epimacular proliferating fibrocellular tissue, which grows across the
inner retinal surface causing a cellophane maculopathy or a macular pucker
(fig. 9a, b). It can cause a macular distortion. In the beginning, the ERMs often
show a global retinal adherence. ERMs with tractional forces show focal adherence. The ERM is characterized by a slightly hyperreflective band on the inner
surface of the retina. The ERMs can also detach from the retinal surface. ERMs
can lead to pseudohole formation, loss of foveal depression or cystoid maculopathy. OCT is helpful in monitoring postoperative follow-up after pars plana
vitrectomy and membrane peeling (fig. 9c).
Lang
44
dramroo@Yahoo.com
c
b
d
a
e
Fig. 8. a Proliferative diabetic retinopathy with neovascularization on the disc and
elsewhere, vitreous hemorrhage and clinically significant macular edema. b OCT shows
macular edema with hyporeflective subretinal edema and hyporeflective cystoid cavities.
c Medium reflective preretinal neovascular tuft at the superior vascular arcade shadowing the
posterior layers. d Medium reflective epipapillar neovascularization shadowing the posterior
layers. e High reflective vitreous hemorrhage completely shadowing the posterior layers.
Conclusion
OCT can provide major contributions to the understanding of diabetic
macular edema and diabetic retinopathy. It can help monitor treatment results
objectively. This is important because new treatment concepts for diabetic
retinopathy are under investigation and might be approved within the near
future. New OCT developments are high-speed, high-resolution devices and
three-dimensional data.
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
45
a
b
c
Fig. 9. a Cystoid diabetic macular edema with epiretinal macular membrane. b OCT
shows vitreomacular traction (arrowhead), epiretinal membrane (arrow), hyporeflective cystoid cavities (asterisks), and serous macular detachment before surgery. c OCT of the same
patient after pars plana vitrectomy and membrane peeling.
Lang
46
dramroo@Yahoo.com
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
Brancato R, Lumbroso B: Guide to Optical Coherence Tomography Interpretation. Rome,
Innovation-News Communication, 2004.
Panozzo G, Parolini B, Gusson E, Mercanti A, Pinackatt S, Bertoldo G, Pignatto S: Diabetic macular edema: an OCT-based classification. Semin Ophthalmol 2004;19:13–20.
Massin P, Erignay A, Haouchine B, Mehidi AB, Paques M, Gaudric A: Retinal thickness in healthy
and diabetic subjects measured using optical coherence tomography mapping software. Eur J
Ophthalmol 2002;12:102–108.
Kang SW, Park CY, Ham DI: The correlation between fluorescein angiographic and optical coherence tomographic features in clinically significant diabetic macular edema. Am J Ophthalmol
2004;137:313–322.
Lattanzio R, Brancato R, Pierro L, Bandello F, Iaccheri B, Fiore T, Maestranzi G: Macular thickness measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT) in diabetic patients. Eur J Ophthalmol
2002;12:482–487.
Bresnick GH: Diabetic macular edema: a review. Ophthalmology 1986;93:989–992.
Yang CS, Cheng CY, Lee FL, Hsu WM, Liu JH: Quantitative assessment of retinal thickness in
diabetic patients with and without clinically significant macular edema using optical coherence
tomography. Acta Ophthalmol Scand 2001;79:266–270.
Otani T, Kishi S, Mauyama Y: Patterns of diabetic macular edema with optical coherence tomography. Am J Ophthalmol 1999;127:688–693.
Özdek SC, Erdinc MA, Gürelik G, Aydin B: Optical coherence tomography assessment of diabetic
macular edema: comparison with fluorescein angiographic and clinical findings. Ophthalmologica
2005;219:86–92.
Hee MR, Puliafito CA, Duker JS, Reichel E, Coker JG, Wilkins JR, Schuma JS, Swanson EA,
Fujimoto JG: Topography of diabetic macular edema with optical coherence tomography.
Opthalmology 1998;105:360–370.
Larsen M, Wang M, Sander B: Overnight thickness variation in diabetic macular edema. Invest
Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2005;47:2313–2316.
Schaudig UH, Glaefke C, Scholz F, Richard G: Optical coherence tomography for retinal thickness measurement in diabetic patients without clinically significant macular edema. Ophthalmic
Surg Lasers 2000;31:182–186.
Brown JC, Solomon SD, Bressler SB, Schachat AP, Di Bernardo C, Bressler N: Detection of diabetic foveal edema. Arch Ophthalmol 2004;122:330–335.
Panozzo G, Gusson E, Parolini B, Mercanti A: Role of OCT in the diagnosis and follow up of diabetic macular edema. Semin Ophthalmol 2003;18:74–81.
Strom C, Sander B, Laresen N, Larsen M, Lund-Andersen H: Diabetic macular edema assessed
with optical coherence tomography and stereo fundus photography. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
2002;43:241–245.
Sanchez-Tocino H, Alvarez-Vidal A, Maldonado MJ, Moreno-Montanes J, Garcia-Layana A:
Retinal thickness study with optical coherence tomography in patients with diabetes. Invest
Ophthamol Vis Sci 2002;43:1588–1594.
Goebel W, Kretzchmar-Gross T: Retinal thickness in diabetic retinopathy. A study using optical
coherence tomography (OCT). Retina 2002;22:759–767.
Browning DJ, Mc Owen MD, Bowen RM, O Marah TL: Comparison of the clinical diagnosis of diabetic
macular edema with diagnosis by optical coherence tomography. Ophthalmology 2004;111: 712–715.
Lang GE: Diabetische Retinopathie – Stadieneinteilung und Laserbehandlung. Klin Monatsbl
Augenheilkd 2005;222:R1–R18.
Prof. Dr. Gabriele E. Lang
Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Augenklinik
Prittwitzstrasse 43
DE–89075 Ulm (Germany)
Tel. ⫹49 731 500 59001, Fax ⫹49 731 500 59002, E-Mail gabriele.lang@uniklinik-ulm.de
Optical Coherence Tomography in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
47
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 48–68
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
Gabriele E. Lang
Augenklinik, Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Ulm, Germany
Abstract
Laser treatment of diabetic retinopathy is still the gold standard of treatment for focal
and diffuse diabetic macular edema and proliferative diabetic retinopathy. When properly
treated, the 5-year risk of blindness is reduced by 90% in patients with proliferative diabetic
retinopathy and the risk of visual loss from macular edema is reduced by 50%. However, only
about 35–50% of patients with diabetes mellitus receive regular eye examinations, which are
important for timely diagnosis and proper treatment. The necessary goals are better patient
education to improve the control of diabetes and better screening programs to reduce the risk
of blindness from diabetic retinopathy.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
In 1959, photocoagulation for the treatment of diabetic retinopathy was
first reported by Meyer-Schwickerath, who used a xenon arc photocoagulator.
In the 1960s, laser treatment of diabetic retinopathy was introduced.
Diabetic retinopathy is becoming a more prevalent cause of visual problems in the future. The number of diabetics is increasing in industrialized and
also in developing countries, reaching a prevalence of up to 7%. Early detection
of diabetic retinopathy and adequate treatment are crucial. At present, the gold
standards of treatment are still laser photocoagulation and vitrectomy.
Pathophysiology and Classification of Diabetic Retinopathy
The classification of diabetic retinopathy is based on intra- and preretinal
microvascular changes. Diabetic retinopathy is broadly classified into nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) and proliferative diabetic retinopathy
(PDR). NPDR is characterized by retinal microvascular changes that are limited
to the retina, whereas PDR shows growth of new vessels from the retinal surface into the vitreous space.
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Fig. 1. Fluorescein angiography of mild NPDR with hyperfluorescent dots representing
microaneurysms.
Retinal capillary microaneurysms are the first definite sign and a hallmark
of diabetic retinopathy. They are most common on the posterior pole. Sometimes,
they can only be diagnosed and differentiated from punctate hemorrhages with
fluorescein angiography (fig. 1). Microaneurysms exhibit bright hyperfluorescent dots in the early frames, whereas hemorrhages block fluorescence.
Microaneurysms are 15–60 m in size. Histologically, microaneurysms are
hypercellular outpouchings of the capillary wall, subsequent also to a loss of
intramural pericytes. Typical for early changes of diabetic retinopathy is the
thickening of the basement membrane of retinal capillaries.
Hemorrhages can also occur, but they disappear within 3 months so that
they are not considered as diabetic retinopathy changes without accompanying
microaneurysms [1].
Microaneurysms alone have no clinical significance concerning risk of
vision loss or progression of diabetic retinopathy. However, they are associated
with an increased risk of cardiovascular complications.
Altered vascular permeability results in macular edema and deposits of
hard exudates. Vascular permeability of the retinal capillaries can already occur
in the early stages of diabetic retinopathy caused by increased expression of
vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). This leads to extravasation of fluid
and plasma constituents. Lipoproteins accumulate most often in the macular
area. When the macular edema involves the center, this leads to visual loss.
Macular edema can be detected with dilated pupil and slit-lamp biomicroscopy,
stereoscopic fundus photography and optical coherence tomography. Fluorescein angiography can identify leaking microaneurysms and leakage from
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
49
a
b
Fig. 2. a PDR with neovascularization on the disc and elsewhere and vitreous hemorrhage. b Fluorescein angiography of the same patient showing dye leakage from preretinal
neovascularizations, ischemic maculopathy and blockage of fluorescence caused by vitreous
hemorrhage.
retinal capillaries. Fluorescein leakage alone does not always indicate the presence of macular edema, and in patients with significant macular edema, sometimes only mild leakage is found. Hard exudates, that often accompany macular
edema, make it much easier to diagnose diabetic macular edema. They are lipid
deposits located in the outer plexiform or Henle layer of the retina. Clinically
hard exudates are yellow-white, well-defined, intraretinal deposits. On optical
coherence tomography (OCT), they are visible as hyperreflective nodular
lesions. The deposit of the hard exudates is associated with the damage of the
inner blood-retinal barrier, i.e. the breakdown of the endothelial tight junctions
in the capillaries and microaneurysms. The extent of the lipid deposits in the
retina is associated with the degree of serum lipid elevation [2].
One serious consequence of diabetic retinopathy is the closure of retinal
capillaries leading to areas of nonperfused retina. Findings associated with
areas of nonperfusion and thus retinal ischemia are large intraretinal hemorrhages, intraretinal microvascular anomalies (IRMA) and venous beading
(VB). The ischemia triggers the production of growth factors like VEGF and
insulin-like growth factor 1. Increasing areas of nonperfusion result in PDR
with preretinal neovascularization and vitreous hemorrhage (fig. 2).
The NPDR is categorized into five levels of severity: very mild, mild,
moderate, severe, very severe (table 1). The extent of intraretinal hemorrhages
and microaneurysms, IRMA and VB in the 4 midperipheral quadrants (fig. 3,
fields 4–7) are the factors that predict the level of NPDR (table 1).
One problem of classification is the difficulty in recognizing IRMA and
VB on clinical examination. They can be more easily diagnosed on fluorescein
angiography.
Lang
50
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 1. Classification of severity of diabetic retinopathy
Disease severity level
Definition
DR absent
microaneursyms and other characteristics absent
Very mild NPDR
no lesions other than microaneurysms
Mild NPDR
microaneurysms plus venous loops, IRMA or VB Q,
retinal hemorrhages, HE, SE
Moderate NPDR
IRMA D/4–5
H/MA M/2–3
VB D/1
Severe NPDR
H/MA S/4–5
VB D/2–3
IRMA M/1
Very severe NPDR
two or more of the features described in severe NPDR
Mild PDR
NVE 1/2 DA in 1 field
Moderate PDR
NVE M/1 (M 1/2 DA in 1 field)
NVD 1/4 to 1/3 DA
NVE 1/2 DA and VH and PRH
High-risk PDR
NVD 1/4 to 1/3 DA on or within 1 DD of the disc
VH or PRH M/1 (M 1 DA)
NVE M/1 and VH or PRH
1–7 number of fields (fig. 3); D definitely present; DA disc area; DD disc
diameter; DR diabetic retinopathy; HE hard exudates; H/MA hemorrhages and
microaneurysms; M moderate; NVD neovascularisation of the disc; NVE neovascularization elsewhere; PRH preretinal hemorrhage; Q questionable; S severe;
SE soft exudates; VH vitreous hemorrhage.
A total of 50.2% of eyes with severe NPDR will develop proliferative
retinopathy within 1 year, and 14.6% will develop proliferative retinopathy with
high-risk characteristics. In eyes with very severe NPDR (severe hemorrhages
in 4 quadrants, VB in 2 quadrants, and IRMA in 1 quadrant), the risk of developing high-risk PDR is 45% [3]. PDR is categorized into three levels: mild,
moderate and high risk (table 1).
Macular edema can be associated with any severity level of diabetic
retinopathy. It is the most common cause of visual loss in NPDR. The Early
Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) investigators classified the
severity by three characteristics concerning the relation to the center of the
macula. The macular edema is defined as clinically significant macular edema
if any of the three features described in table 2 is present.
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
51
6
4
3
x2
5
1
7
Fig. 3. Seven standard fields of the ETDRS classification, with x representing the
fovea [3].
Table 2. Classification of diabetic clinically significant macular edema
Thickening of the retina at or within 500 m of the center of the macula
Hard exudates at or within 500 m of the center of the macula associated with thickening of
the adjacent retina
A zone or zones of thickening of 1 disc area or larger, any part of which is within 1 disc
diameter of the center of the macula
A more simplified international classification of diabetic retinopathy and
macular edema was proposed by the Global Diabetic Retinopathy Project
Group (tables 3, 4) in order to improve communication between ophthalmologists and primary care physicians [4]. This classification simplifies the ETDRS
classification of diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema for clinical
use improving ophthalmological screening of diabetic patients and guiding the
definition for laser treatment.
Epidemiology
The Centers of Disease Control estimate that 18.2 million Americans have
diabetes mellitus, of whom 90% have type 2 diabetes [5]. Diagnosed diabetes
mellitus is most prevalent in the middle-aged and elderly populations.
Lang
52
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 3. Diabetic retinopathy disease severity scale [4]
Disease severity level
Findings observable on dilated ophthalmoscopy
No retinopathy
Mild NPDR
Moderate NPDR
Severe NPDR
no abnormalities
miroaneurysms only
more than just microaneurysms, but less than severe NPDR
more than 20 intraretinal hemorrhages in each of
4 quadrants, definite VB in 2 quadrants, prominent
IRMA in 1 quadrant and no signs of PDR
neovascularization, vitreous/preretinal hemorrhage
PDR
Table 4. Diabetic macular edema disease severity scale [4]
Proposed disease severity level
Findings on dilated ophthalmoscopy
Diabetic macular edema apparently absent
no apparent retinal thickening or hard exudates in
posterior pole
some apparent retinal thickening or hard exudates in
posterior pole
Diabetic macular edema apparently present
If diabetic macular edema is present, it can
be categorized as follows:
Mild diabetic macular edema
Moderate diabetic macular edema
Severe diabetic macular edema
some retinal thickening or hard exudates in posterior
pole but distant from the center of the macula
retinal thickening or hard exudates approaching the
center of the macula but not involving the center
retinal thickening or hard exudates involving the
center of the macula
About 4.1 million adults over the age of 40 years have diabetic retinopathy [6].
In type 1 diabetic patients, ocular involvement occurs as early as 3–5 years after
onset of diabetes mellitus. When the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes is made, up to
15% already have diabetic retinopathy. Occasionally, diabetic retinopathy is the
initial sign of type 2 diabetes. The prevalence of any diabetic retinopathy is
about 98% after 20 years and about 50% for PDR after 15 years of type 1 diabetes mellitus [7]. About 15% of type 1 diabetic patients have diabetic macular
edema after 15 years. In type 2 diabetic patients, 50–80% have diabetic
retinopathy after 20 years and 10–30% have PDR. A clinically significant macular edema is found in 25% of type 2 diabetic patients after 15 years [8].
However, the incidence, especially of PDR, seems to be decreasing in recent
years due to better glycemic control.
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
53
Risk Factors
In several observational studies, poorer glycemic control is associated with
increased severity of diabetic retinopathy. When the Diabetes Control and
Complications Trial [9] results were stratified by hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels,
there was a 40% reduction in the risk of retinopathy progression for every 10%
decrease in HbA1c [2]. Therefore, the recommended levels of HbA1c are below 7%.
In the UK Prospective Diabetes Study, a comparison of more intensive
blood pressure control versus less intensive blood pressure control in type 2 diabetics demonstrated that better blood pressure control was associated with a
decreased risk of retinopathy progression [10]. There might also be a benefit on
the progression of diabetic retinopathy of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition and blood pressure reduction, even in normotensive persons [11]. The
UK Prospective Diabetes Study compared -blockers and angiotensin-converting
enzyme inhibitors in tight blood pressure control and found that benefits were
present in both treatment groups. Good blood pressure control is considered
below 130/80 mm Hg [10].
The Wisconsin Epidemiological Study of Diabetic Retinopathy and ETDRS
found elevated serum levels of cholesterol being associated with increased
severity of hard exudates [1]. The severity of retinal hard exudates is associated
with decreased visual acuity and is a significant risk factor for moderate visual
loss [12]. The strongest risk factor for the development of subretinal fibrosis in
patients with diabetic macular edema was the presence of severe hard exudates
[13]. The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial [14] found that the severity
of retinopathy was associated with increasing triglycerides and inversely associated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Elevated triglycerides and lowdensity lipoprotein cholesterol are associated with PDR [15]. These data suggest
that lowering elevated serum lipids might reduce the risk of visual loss.
Pregnancy may accelerate the progression of diabetic retinopathy [16],
even though this seems to be rare. Pregnant diabetic patients with mild or moderate NPDR should be examined every 3 months, and those with severe NPDR
every 1–3 months.
Examination of Diabetic Patients
Clinical examination should include best corrected visual acuity and
intraocular pressure to rule out glaucoma. Slit-lamp examination is necessary to
detect iris neovascularization.
Fundus examination should be performed with ophthalmoscopy, a fundus
contact lens, or with a 78- or 90-diopter fundus lens at the slit lamp with dilated
Lang
54
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 5. Ophthalmological examination in patients with diabetes mellitus
Method
Reason for examination
Best corrected visual acuity
Motility
Pupillary function
Intraocular pressure
Slit-lamp examination
Gonioscopy
Dilated fundus examination
Fundus photography
Fluorescein angiography
to rule out visual loss
to rule out ocular muscle paresis
to rule out pupillary dysfunction
increased risk of glaucoma
to rule out iris neovascularization
to rule out angle neovascularization
staging of diabetic retinopathy and macular edema
staging of diabetic retinopathy and macular edema
staging of diabetic retinopathy diagnosis of ischemic
maculopathy
qualitative and quantitative diagnosis of macular edema
monitor treatment
Optical coherence tomography
Table 6. Follow-up and laser treatment of diabetic retinopathy
Stage of retinopathy
Follow-up (months)
Laser
Fluorescein angiography
No DR or very mild NPDR
Mild and moderate NPDR
NPDR without CSME
NPDR with CSME
NPDR with CME
Severe and very severe NPDR
Mild and moderate PDR
PDR with high risk
12
6–12
4–6
3–4
2–4
3–4
2–3
3
no
no
no
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
no
no
occasionally
yes
yes
occasionally
yes
occasionally
CME Cystoid macular edema; CSME clinically significant macular edema; DR diabetic retinopathy.
pupils to assess the severity of diabetic retinopathy. Pharmacological mydriasis
improves image quality, allows better identification of maculopathy and the grading of diabetic retinopathy stage [17]. The risk of angle-closure glaucoma, that
might be caused by mydriasis, is extremely rare, especially if the anterior chamber
depth is examined by slit-lamp biomicroscopy prior to pupil dilation [18].
Gonioscopy can rule out iris neovascularization and angle closure (table 5).
If indicated, fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography should
be performed (tables 5, 6). If dense vitreous hemorrhage blocks the view on the
fundus, retinal detachment should be ruled out by ultrasonography.
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
55
This clinical evaluation in diabetic patients is essential to make the correct
treatment decisions. Follow-up of the patients depends on the stage of retinopathy and macular involvement (table 6).
Treatment Recommendations
In patients with mild and moderate NPDR, the risk of progression to proliferative retinopathy is very low. Therefore, scatter photocoagulation is not
recommended in eyes with mild or moderate NPDR, provided that careful followup can be maintained. In this group, the 5-year rate of severe visual loss is 1–3%.
Good glycemic and blood pressure control and treatment of dyslipidemia,
if present, are recommended [19].
Panretinal Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
The laser treatment recommendations for diabetic retinopathy are based on
the results of two randomized clinical trials of laser photocoagulation, the
Diabetic Retinopathy Study (DRS) [20] and the ETDRS [21].
The results of the DRS showed a 50% reduction in severe visual loss in
eyes with severe NPDR or PDR and visual acuity of 20/100 or better that had
received photocoagulation compared with eyes that were not treated. The overall risk of severe visual loss with PDR at the 2-year follow-up examination was
6% in the treated eyes compared with 16% in the control group. With the DRS
high-risk characteristics, the risk increased to 11% in the treated eyes compared
with 26% in the control group.
The reports of the DRS identified retinopathy characteristics with a high
risk of severe visual loss which are neovascularization on the disc or any
neovascularization accompanied by vitreous hemorrhage [1]. Panretinal laser
treatment considerably improves the visual prognosis, especially in PDR. Wei
et al. [22] found a complete resolution of neovascularization in 67% of eyes, and a
partial resolution in 33% which needed additional photocoagulation. Postoperative preretinal and vitreous hemorrhage occurred in 9%. Qian et al. [23]
report that panretinal argon laser photocoagulation is effective in 85% of eyes
with NPDR and in 77% with PDR. Visual acuity improved in 23% and was
unchanged in 61%. Rema et al. [24] studied the outcome of patients with type 2
diabetes and PDR after panretinal laser treatment. Seventy-three percent of
patients with visual acuity of 6/9 or better maintained their vision. Of patients
with visual acuity 6/12–6/36, 59% maintained the same vision and 20% improved
their vision at 1-year follow-up. Of patients with visual acuity 6/60 or less, 70%
Lang
56
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
Fig. 4. a PDR with vitreous hemorrhage before laser treatment. b The same eye after
panretinal laser treatment.
maintained their vision and 30% improved. On multiple regression analysis, diastolic blood pressure, duration of diabetes, fasting blood glucose and nephropathy
were associated with decreased vision after panretinal laser treatment.
Scatter laser photocoagulation should be considered in severe and very
severe NPDR, especially in patients with poor compliance, proliferative disease
in the fellow eye, pending cataract surgery, poor glycemic control, high blood
pressure, advanced renal disease and extensive capillary closure [25]. In eyes
with severe and very severe NPDR and clinically significant macular edema,
the macular edema is treated first and panretinal scatter photocoagulation
should be delayed until the macular edema has improved.
In mild and moderate PDR, scatter laser photocoagulation should be performed because it reduces the risk of severe visual loss, especially in type 2 diabetes. The clinically significant macular edema and cystoid macular edema
should be treated first, before performing panretinal laser treatment.
In PDR with high-risk characteristics, extensive scatter laser photocoagulation
should be performed immediately because of the high risk of visual loss (fig. 4).
In the standard full-scatter panretinal photocoagulation, 1,200–1,600
burns of 500-m spot size on the retina are applied to the retina (table 7; fig. 4).
The burns are placed from the vascular arcades to the equator, nasally 500 m
apart from the optic disc and temporally 2 disc diameters temporal to the macular center (3,000 m). Treatment has to be extended to within the vascular
arcades, if retinal neovascularization is located within this area with a spot size
of 200 m when treating within 1,500 m from the center of the foveal avascular zone. Treatment should not be extended to closer than 500 m from the
macular center. If a grid laser treatment has been performed for clinically
significant macular edema, the panretinal burns should be placed temporally
adjacent to the macular burns, if there are retinal edema or areas of nonperfused
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
57
Table 7. Treatment of diabetic retinopathy
Diabetic retinopathy
CSME
CME
Severe NPDR
High risk PDR
Mild and moderate PDR
Focal ME Diffuse ME Grid LP Consider panretinal LP Panretinal LP
Focal LP
With VH
Panretinal LP or
vitrectomy
Grid LP
CME Cystoid macular edema; CSME clinically significant macular edema;
LP laser photocoagulation; ME macular edema; VH vitreous hemorrhage.
retina that carry the risk of later development of neovascularization. The burns
should have moderate intensity with a spacing of about 1 burn width apart. In
patients with high-risk PDR and iris neovascularization, a number of 2,000
burns is recommended. Panretinal photocoagulation should be completed in
two or more sessions within 3–6 weeks. One session should not extend
500–600 burns to avoid side effects that are described below. Further division
of panretinal treatment sessions can be considered when clinically significant
macular edema is present, because this reduces the risk of visual loss. The
order of sessions in which the retina is treated is optional. If there is a risk of
vitreous hemorrhage, the inferior quadrants should be treated first. Disc neovascularization and elevated neovascularization elsewhere are treated with scatter photocoagulation in an attempt to get a regression of the new vessels. Flat
neovascularization elsewhere is directly treated with confluent laser burns with
200–500 m in size on the retina to close the new vessels. Panretinal scatter
photocoagulation is very effective in iris neovascularization (at least 2,000 laser
burns), especially if treatment is given prior to the development of neovascular
glaucoma. In neovascular glaucoma, panretinal laser treatment should be
combined with a cyclodestructive procedure. Preferably, the scatter treatment
should be applied first, because after the cyclodestructive procedure, fibrin and
cells in the anterior chamber might hinder laser treatment.
Lang
58
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 8. Panretinal laser treatment
Laser spot size
Exposure
Intensity
Number of burns
Placement
Number of sessions
Lesions treated directly
Follow-up treatment
500 m at retina
0.1–0.2 s
mild to moderate
1,200–1,600, in iris neovascularization 2,000
1 burn apart, 2 disc diameters from the fovea out to
the equator, retreatment and iris neovascularization to
the periphery
2–5
NVE with overlapping burns
persistent or recurrent neovascularization
NVE Neovascularization elsewhere.
Panretinal photocoagulation significantly reduces the risk of severe visual
loss, but in some patients, vision may worsen in spite of laser treatment. If in
patients with disk neovascularization the regression of the neovascular vessels
is slow, the risk of vitreous hemorrhage persists. The patients must return for
follow-up visits at 3-month intervals for a successful result, since additional
laser is needed in at least 30% of patients, because of the insufficient regression
of neovascularization in at least one third of the patients. Additional fill-in laser
treatment between prior laser scars and photocoagulation of the peripheral
retina are required, if the new vessels do not regress sufficiently.
The Goldmann three-mirror laser lens gives an upright image and can be
used for retinal posterior pole and periphery treatment. For panretinal treatment, wide-angle lenses are usually employed. They provide a wider view and
have an invert image. They differ in image magnification, field of view and
laser spot magnification factor (table 8). The wider the field, the smaller the
image magnification.
The panretinal laser treatment can usually be performed under topical
anesthesia. If a patient is experiencing more severe pain, the pace of the applications can be lowered, and the ciliary nerves at 3 and 9 o’clock should be
avoided or subconjunctival anesthesia can be used.
Laser lenses suitable for panretinal laser treatment are wide field lenses
with a magnification of 1.4 for the area up to the equator and lenses with a
magnification of 1.8 for the retinal periphery.
The size of the laser burns in the retina depends on the laser spot size, the
magnification of the lens, the power and duration of the applied laser burn, the
transparency of the media (cataract requires more energy, pseudophakia less
energy), and the pigmentation of the eye. The power of the laser burn is the minimum necessary to obtain a burn of medium, gray-white intensity.
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
59
However, in a prospective randomized controlled clinical trial, Bandello
et al. [26] found that light panretinal photocoagulation with a very light effect
of the burn on the retina on biomicroscopy had the same efficacy in comparison
with classic treatment with white burns in eyes with high-risk PDR. Light coagulation was associated with fewer complications and allowed reduction in number of treatment sessions. The regression of neovascularization was the same in
both groups, the total mean session number was 7.4 for the light and 9.9 for the
classic treatment group. Therefore, light effect of burns can also be considered
for panretinial laser treatment.
Zaninetti et al. [27] emphasize that eyes requiring vitrectomy because of
vitreous hemorrhage or retinal detachment in PDR after panretinal laser photocoagulation are often a result of incomplete photocoagulation. Therefore, sufficient panretinal laser treatment is mandatory.
Strong positive predictors of post-panretinal photocoagulation visual acuity outcome are pretreatment visual acuity and low age. Diabetes type and diabetes duration have no influence on visual outcome [28]. The visual prognosis
is inversely related to the number of treatment sessions required.
Exploration of symptoms revealed that the most frequently reported symptom due to diabetic retinopathy is blurred vision (55% of patients). First-time
laser-treated patients report fewer symptoms than multi-treated patients. The
patients’ expectations were basically met; however, the treatment had less of an
impact than they had hoped for. Patients would have laser treatment again if
they needed [29].
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Macular Edema
Diabetic macular edema may be present at any level of NPDR and PDR. It
is caused by either focal or diffuse leakage. As the severity of diabetic retinopathy increases, the proportion of eyes with macular edema increases, ranging
from 38% in eyes with moderate to severe NPDR to 71% in eyes with PDR [30].
The diagnosis of macular edema requires stereoscopic examination of the
macula at the slit lamp with a fundus lens with dilated pupil. If the diagnosis of diabetic macular edema is made, a fluorescein angiography should be performed to
rule out additional ischemic maculopathy. With the OCT, the macular edema can
be quantified and posterior hyaloid traction can be detected. Secondary epiretinal
membranes can also be associated with diabetic macular edema.
Diabetic macular edema is classified into clinically significant and clinically insignificant according to the ETDRS (table 2) or, by the more simplified
scale for diabetic macular edema, into mild, moderate and severe diabetic macular edema (table 4).
Lang
60
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
Fig. 5. a Clinically significant macular edema with focal area of retinal thickening
with hard exudates. b The same eye after focal laser treatment.
In patients with diabetic macular edema, blood glucose and blood pressure
control, serum lipids and proteinuria should be checked and treated adequately.
Diabetic macular edema has to be differentiated from ischemic maculopathy, which is caused by capillary dropout in the center of the macula leading to
an enlargement of the foveal acvascular zone. Isolated ischemic maculopathy is
not treated with laser. However, if ischemic maculopathy is associated with
clinically significant macular edema, laser treatment is indicated.
Laser treatment reduced the risk of vision loss due to diabetic macular
edema by 50–70%. About 17% of laser-treated eyes will experience a three-line
improvement in visual acuity in 5 years [3]. Ohkoshi [31] found that visual
acuity after grid laser photocoagulation in diffuse diabetic macular edema
improved more than 0.2 levels in 41% of eyes, as well as in 60% of eyes in
which preoperative visual acuity had been less than 0.5. Average visual acuity
reached a plateau within 3 months after surgery.
After argon laser treatment, Wei et al. [22] found an improvement in visual
acuity by at least one line on the visual acuity chart in 35%, no change in 55%,
and deterioration in 19% of eyes. Retinal edema and fluorescein leakage were
reduced in 89% of eyes, with the rest requiring additional treatment.
In focal diabetic macular edema, only the area of retinal thickening is treated
(fig. 5). In circinate rings of hard exudates, the leaking microaneurysms that need
to be treated are usually located in the center of the ring. Successfully treated
leaking microaneurysms change the color to either white or dark red. Spots of
50 m have a higher risk of Bruch’s membrane perforation and should be
avoided. Initial treatment must not be applied close to the center of the foveal
avascular zone, because it results in central scotomas. Laser burns are not applied
within 500 m of the center of the fovea [21]. For the patient, the most disturbing
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
61
Table 9. Laser lenses and spot magnification
Lens
Magnification of spot in retina
Mainster Standard/Focal Grid
Mainster Wide Field
Mainster Ultrafield
Volk Area Centralis
Volk Trans Equator
Volk Quadra Aspheric
Volk Superquad
Goldmann three-mirror lens
1.05
1.47
1.89
1.0
1.43
1.92
2.0
1.08
Table 10. Treatment of diabetic macular edema
Laser spot size
Exposure
Intensity
Area
Placement
Number of sessions
Lesions treated directly
Follow-up treatment
100–200 m at retina
0.1–0.2 s
mild to moderate
focal in focal edema, grid in diffuse edema
1 burn apart
1
microaneurysms, areas of retinal thickening
every 3 months if macular edema persists
scars are located at 3 and 9 o’clock. If the clinically macular edema persists after
3–6 months, leaking microaneurysms up to 300 m from the center of the fovea
can be treated. Often mild intensity burns are as effective as more intense burns in
reaching an improvement or resolution of the macular edema and they also allow
more retreatment sessions if necessary. In diabetic macular edema, no confluent
burns should be used in the macular area. It is important to retreat the patients in
3-month intervals, in areas where the macular edema persists.
Focal macular edema is treated only in the area of leaking microaneurysms
and retinal thickening between 500 and 3,000 m from the center of the macula. Individual microaneurysms are treated with a spot size of 50 or preferably
100 m. Minimal power should be used to get a color change (whitening or
darkening) of the microaneurysms.
Grid laser treatment is recommended for diffuse macular edema and is still
the gold standard for treatment of diffuse macular edema. Prompt photocoagulation is indicated in eyes with center involvement of the macula. Light to moderate intensity of 100- to 200-m burns are placed 1 burn apart, producing a
grid of equally spaced burns (tables 9–10; fig. 6). The patients should be
Lang
62
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
Fig. 6. a Diffuse macular edema with hard exudates in the center of the macula after
laser retreatment. b The same patient after complete resorption of the macular edema and
hard exudates.
examined at 3-month intervals and considered for additional treatment if clinically significant macular edema persists.
Bandello et al. [32] studied light versus classic laser treatment for clinically significant macular edema. In light laser treatment, the energy employed
was the lowest capable to produce barely visible burns at the level of the retinal
pigment epithelium. It was as effective in decreasing the foveal retinal thickness
on OCT and visual improvement or loss.
Vitreomacular traction is very difficult to detect on clinical grounds but is
easily visible on OCT. If it is combined with clinically significant macular
edema, we perform a grid laser treatment first, if possible. Sometimes, there is
a spontaneous complete vitreous detachment and resolution of the vitreomacular traction after laser treatment. If vitreomacular traction persists, vitrectomy is
performed. Often after vitrectomy, further macular laser treatment is necessary
because of persistent clinically significant macular edema. Epiretinal membranes also have to be treated by vitrectomy and membrane peeling, combined
with laser treatment. However, they tend to recur after some time.
If macular edema is combined with ischemic maculopathy, laser treatment
should be performed if dye leakage is found on fluorescein angiography or retinal thickening is present on biomicroscopy or OCT examination. However,
laser burns should spare about 500 m of the still perfused capillaries on the
boarder to the foveal avascular zone. If the laser burns are placed right at the
edge of the avascular foveal area, immediate visual loss often occurs because
the capillaries are further compromised, leading to more ischemia.
Subthreshold diode micropulse photocoagulation was introduced for the
treatment of clinically significant macular edema. Visual acuity was stable or
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
63
improved in 85% of treated eyes, with a mean follow-up of 12.2 months.
Macular edema decreased in 96% and resolved in 79% of treated eyes. No
adverse laser events occurred. No laser lesions were detectable on ophthalmoscopy or angiography after treatment, and no scarring occurred during the
follow-up period. Subthreshold diode micropulse laser photocoagulation minimizes chorioretinal damage in the management of clinically significant macular edema and demonstrates a beneficial effect on visual acuity and edema
resolution [33].
In a small study, Patel et al. [34] found no visual benefit for standard pars
plana vitrectomy and removal of the posterior hyaloid compared with macular
grid photocoagulation alone in eyes that showed persistent clinically significant
macular edema despite previous macular photocoagulation.
VEGF inhibitors were beneficial in diabetic macular edema in a phase II
study. A combination therapy of laser and VEGF inhibitors might result in a
better outcome and needs to be further investigated.
Wavelengths
The most commonly used wavelengths are double-frequency Nd:YAG
(532 nm) or argon green (514 nm). Krypton red and dye lasers are equally effective, but they may be more painful. Gupta et al. [35] examined the efficacy of
various wavelengths in the treatment of clinically significant macular edema.
Reduction or elimination of macular edema was found in 93.3% of argon-,
88.5% of krypton-, 92.9% of frequency-doubled Nd:YAG-, and 84.8% of diode
laser-treated eyes. Although there was no statistically significant difference
between the groups, frequency-doubled Nd:YAG-treated eyes appeared to have
the advantage of requiring fewer retreatment sessions.
Rules to Bear in Mind
The therapeutic effect of the laser occurs through absorption of the laser
energy in the retinal pigment epithelium. Laser burns should not be directed on
vitreous hemorrhage or larger intraretinal hemorrhages because the hemoglobin would absorb the laser energy and the vitreous traction, or nerve fiber
damage would result. Hard exudates should not be treated directly either,
because they do not absorb the laser energy. Major retinal vessels should not
be treated directly because of the risk of vessel rupture or closure; however,
this is very rare. Areas with proliferative vitreoretinopathy should not be
Lang
64
dramroo@Yahoo.com
treated directly because of the risk of shrinkage of the membrane, which then
causes retinal traction and detachment. Chorioretinal scars should be avoided
because the risk of visual field loss and secondary choroidal neovascularization increases.
In unsatisfactory laser treatment results, one should always consider
undertreatment as reason for failure of improvement in macular edema or proliferative changes. Either the treated area was too small, the number of applied
burns not sufficient or there was no adequate retreatment.
Side Effects
The most common side effects of panretinal laser treatment are pain during
the treatment, moderate visual loss, restriction of the visual fields and nyctalopia.
Visual field loss occurs in 5% of argon laser-treated eyes [36]. Permanent visual
loss of two or more lines is experienced in 3% of treated eyes. Other side effects
are glare, exudative retinal detachment, ciliochoroidal effusion, elevated intraocular pressure, angle-closure glaucoma and subretinal or epiretinal fibrosis. The
risk of ciliochoroidal effusion depends on burn intensity, burn size and number
and axial length representing the percentage of the retinal surface area. Some
degree of cilioretinal effusion occurs in up to 59–90% of patients, resolving
within 2 weeks. Those side effects are less common when scatter treatment is
carried out in two or more sessions [37]. Macular edema may exacerbate by panretinal laser treatment. Visual loss can be reduced by treating the macular edema
prior to initiating panretinal photocoagulation, avoiding intense panretinal photocoagulation burns and dividing panretinal photocoagulation in several treatment sessions. Rare side effects are damage of the cornea, iris or lens (especially
in wide field laser lenses). Transient myopia, accomodative pareses, retinal or
choroidal hemorrhages, and uveitis are rare. After panretinal laser treatment, a
breakdown of the blood-aqueous barrier is found. More pigmented irides
showed a greater breakdown than blue irides [38].
The most common side effects of macular laser treatment are scotomas in
laser burns close to the boarder of the foveal avascular zone. Subretinal fibrosis
most likely develops in eyes with severe hard exudate deposition. Secondary
choroidal neovascularization can develop in laser scars because of the rupture
of Bruch’s membrane. The larger laser burns have a lower risk of breaks in
Bruch’s membrane and therefore a lower risk of secondary choriodal neovascularization in the area of laser scars.
If the patient is not cooperative, a foveal burn might occur if the patient
moves the eye during laser exposure. Inadvertent foveal burns can be avoided
by the laser surgeon if the center of the macula and the patient’s fixation point
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
65
are clearly identified before the laser treatment is started. Treatment of macular
edema can be challenging if the fovea is obscured by edema, exudates or hemorrhages. It must also be taken into consideration that laser scars expand with
time. Maeshima et al. [39] found that 90% of the laser scars gradually increase
in size. The mean annual expansion rates were 12.7% in the posterior pole and
7% in the midperiphery. The annual expansion rate (16.5%) more than 4 years
after treatment was higher than that (8.8%) within 4 years of treatment. Lasers
of a longer wavelength contributed to larger areas of chorioretinal atrophy.
Delivery of laser energy using small spot sizes, short durations and high power
increases the risk of perforation of Bruch’s membrane and choroidal neovascularization. Blue wavelength should not be used because of the damage of photoreceptors.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Chew EY, Ferris FL 3rd: Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy; in Ryan S (ed): Retina. St Louis,
Mosby, 1994, chap 67, pp 125–129.
Chew EY, Klein ML, Ferris FL 3rd, et al: Association of elevated serum lipid levels with retinal
hard exudate in diabetic retinopathy. Arch Ophthalmol 1996;114:1079–1084.
Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group: Early photocoagulation for diabetic
retinopathy. ETDRS report number 9. Ophthalmology 1991;98:766–785.
Wilkinson CP, Ferris FL, Klein RE, Lee PP, Agardh CD, Davis M, Dills D, Kampik A,
Pararajasegaram R, Verdaguer JT: Proposed international clinical diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema disease severity scales. Ophthalmology 2003;100:1677–1682.
Centers for Disease Control. www.cdc.gov/diabetes/news/docs/dpp.htm.
Harris M, Flegal KM, Cowie CC, et al: Prevalence of diabetes, impaired fasting glucose and
impaired glucose tolerance in US adults. The Third National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey, 1988–1994. Diabetes Care 1998;21:518–524.
Frank R: Etiologic mechanisms in diabetic retinopathy; in Ryan S (ed): Retina, ed 4. St Louis,
Mosby, 1994, pp 1241–1270.
Lang GE: Diabetische Retinopathie – Stadieneinteilung und Laserbehandlung. Klin Monatsbl
Augenheilkd 2005;222:R1–R18.
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group: The effects of intensive treatment
of diabetes on the development and progression of long-term complications in insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus. N Engl J Med 1993;329:977–986.
UK Prospective Diabetes Study Group: Tight blood pressure control and risk of macrovascular
and microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes: UKPDS 38. BMJ 1998;317:703–713.
Chaturvedi N, Sjolie AK, Stephen JM, et al: Effect of lisinopril on progression of retinopathy in
normotensive people with type 1 diabetes. Lancet 1998;351:28–31.
Klein BEK, Moss SE, Klein R, et al: The Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy.
13. Relationship of serum cholesterol to retinopathy and hard exudates. Ophthalmology 1991;98:
1261–1265.
Fong DS, Segal PP, Myers F, et al: Subretinal fibrosis in diabetic macular edema. ETDRS report
number 23. Arch Ophthalmol 1997;115:873–877.
Lyons TJ, Jenkins AJ, Zhen D, et al: Diabetic retinopathy and serum lipoprotein subclasses in the
DCCT/EDIC cohort. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45:910–918.
Lang
66
dramroo@Yahoo.com
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
Kostraba JN, Klein R, Dorman JS, et al: The epidemiology of diabetes complications study. 4.
Correlates of diabetic background and proliferative retinopathy. Am J Epidemiol 1991;133:381–391.
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group: Effect of pregnancy on the
microvascular complications. Diabetes Care 2000;23:1084–1091.
Deb-Joardar N, Germain N, Thuret G, Manoli P, Garcin AF, Millot L, Gavet Y, Gain P: Screening
for diabetic retinopathy by ophthalmologists and endocrinologists with pupillary dilation and a
nonmydriatic digital camera. Am J Ophthalmol 2005;140:814–821.
Moss S, Klein R, Klein B: Factors associated with having eye examinations in persons with diabetes. Arch Fam Med 1995;4:529–534.
Verdaguer JT: Photocoagulation for diabetic retinopathy; in Boyd S, Agarwal A, Boyd BF (eds):
Laser Surgery of the Eye. El Dorado, Highlights of Ophthalmology, 2005, pp 283–295.
Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group: Indications for photocoagulation treatment of diabetic retinopathy. DRS report No 14. Int Ophthalmol Clin 1987;27:239–253.
Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group: Treatment techniques and clinical
guidelines for photocoagulation of diabetic macular edema. ETDRS report number 2.
Ophthalmology 1987;94:761–774.
Wei ZY, Hu SX, Tang N, Wu J, Wang J: Effect of argon laser photocoagulation on diabetic
retinopathy. Ci Yi Jun Yi Da Xue Xue Bao 2004;24:1313–1315.
Qian Z, Zhu L, Zhao C: Observation on clinical effects of panretinal coagulation for diabetic
retinopathy. Yan Ke Xue Bao 2002;18:99–101.
Rema M, Sujatha P, Pradeepa R: Visual outcomes of pan-retinal photocoagulation in diabetic
retinopathy at one-year follow-up and associated risk factors. Indian J Ophthalmol 2005;53:
93–99.
Ferris F: Early photocoagulation in patients with either type I or type II diabetes. Trans Am
Ophthalmol Soc 1996;94:505–537.
Bandello F, Brancato R, Menchini U, Virgili G, Lanzetta P, Ferrari E, Incorvaia C: Light panretinal
photocoagulation (LPRP) versus classic panretinal photocoagulation (CPRP) in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Semin Ophthalmol 2001;16:12–18.
Zaninetti M, Petropoulos IK, Pournaras CJ: Proliferative diabetic retinopathy: vitreo-retinal complications are often related to insufficient retinal photocoagulation. J Fr Ophtalmol 2005;28: 381–384.
Bek T, Erlandsen M: Visual prognosis after panretinal photocoagulation for proliferative diabetic
retinopathy. Acta Ophthalmol Scand 2006;84:16–20.
Scanlon PH, Martin ML, Bailey C, Johnson E, Hykin P, Keightley S: Reported symptoms and
quality-of-life impacts in patients having laser treatment for sight threatening diabetic retinopathy.
Diabet Med 2006;23:60–66.
Brenick GH: Diabetic macular edema, a review. Ophthalmology 1986;93:989–997.
Ohkoshi K: Visual prognosis and prognostic risk factors after photocoagulation for diffuse diabetic macular edema. Nippon Ganka Gakkai Zasshi 2005;109:210–217.
Bandello F, Polito A, Del Borrello M, Zemella N, Isola M: ‘Light’ versus ‘classic’ laser treatment
for clinically significant diabetic macular edema. Br J Ophthalmol 2005;89:864–870.
Luttrull JK, Musch DC, Mainster MA: Subthreshold diode micropulse photocoagulation for the
treatment of clinically significant diabetic macular oedema. Br J Ophthalmol 2005;89:74–80.
Patel JI, Hykin PG, Schadt M, Luong V, Bunce C, Fitzke C, Fitzke F, Gregor ZJ: Diabetic macular
oedema: pilot randomised trial of pars plana vitrectomy vs macular argon photocoagulation. Eye
2006;20:873–881.
Gupta V, Gupta A, Kaur R, Narang S, Dogra MR: Efficacy of various laser wavelengths in the
treatment of clinically significant macular edema in diabetics. Ophthalmic Surg Lasers 2001;32:
397–405.
Stoltz RA, Brucker AJ: Lasers in diabetes; in Fankhauser F, Kwasniewska S (eds): Lasers in
Ophthalmology. The Hague, Karger Publications, 2003, pp 229–240.
Liang H, Huamonte F: Reduction of immediate complications after panretinal photocoagulation.
Retina 1984;4:166–170.
Laser Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
67
38
39
Moriarty AP, Spalton DJ, Shilling JS, Ffytche TJ, Bulsara M: Breakdown of the blood-aqueous
barrier after argon laser panretinal photocoagulation for proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Ophthalmology 1996;103:833–838.
Maeshima K, Utsugi-Sutoh N, Otrani T, Kishi S: Progressive enlargement of scattered photocoagulation scars in diabetic retinopathy. Retina 2004;24:507–511.
Prof. Dr. Gabriele E. Lang
Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Augenklinik
Prittwitzstrasse 43
DE–89075 Ulm (Germany)
Tel. 49 731 500 59001, Fax 49 731 500 59002, E-Mail gabriele.lang@uniklinik-ulm.de
Lang
68
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 69–87
Benefits and Limitations in Vitreoretinal
Surgery for Proliferative Diabetic
Retinopathy and Macular Edema
Antonia M. Joussena, Sandra Joeresb
a
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Duesseldorf, Duesseldorf, and
Department of Vitreoretinal Surgery, Center of Ophthalmology, University of
Cologne, Cologne, Germany
b
Abstract
Surgical therapy for diabetic retinopathy has been refined since the 1960s (Early
Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study). While the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy
Study abstained from panretinal photocoagulation at the time of surgery, today, endophotocoagulation is the most important singular reason for vitrectomy, e.g., in vitreous hemorrhage. Despite improved techniques, the surgical prognosis is lagging behind patient
expectations, especially in cases of advanced proliferative stages. The following review
addresses current surgical options and indications of diabetic retinopathy/maculopathy.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
The advent of pars plana vitrectomy by Robert Machemer [1995] considerably improved the prognosis of advanced stages of diabetic retinopathy.
Original indications for pars plana vitrectomy in diabetic retinopathy
include: (1) persistent vitreous hemorrhage, (2) tractive detachment of the macula, (3) combined tractional and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment, and (4)
progressive fibrovascular proliferation despite panretinal photocoagulation [Ho
et al., 1992].
Photocoagulation is the only lasting treatment so far. The rationale of photocoagulation is to remedy retinal ischemia and thereby eliminate growth factors
that would otherwise cause new vessel formation and blood-ocular barrier breakdown. In certain eyes, vitrectomy is a prerequisite of retinal photocoagulation.
Relative indications for vitrectomy comprise:
• persistent retrohyaloidal hemorrhage leading to massive fibrosis at the vitreoretinal interface [Smiddy and Flynn, 1999];
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 1. Indications for vitrectomy in diabetic retinopathy
Ischemia and complications
Active proliferative retinopathy and consequences
Neovascularization of the anterior segment in connection with secondary glaucoma
Media opacities
Persistent vitreous opacities
Persistent subhyaloidal fibrosis
Neovascularization of the anterior segment in connection with vitreous opacities
Vitreous hemorrhage (e.g., postoperatively) in combination with ‘ghost cell glaucoma’
Traction-related complications
Progressive fibrovascular proliferation
Tractive macular detachment
Combined tractional rhegmatogenous detachment
Macular edema with a ‘taut hyaloid’
Nonvascularized epiretinal membranes (e.g., postoperatively)
•
tractional retinal detachment outside the macula, which may remain stable
without progression [Smiddy and Flynn, 1999]; exceptions are cases presenting with newly formed active neovascularization, recurrent vitreous
bleeding, or progression towards the macula area;
• neovascular glaucoma [Bartz-Schmidt et al., 1999; Joussen et al., 2003].
It is agreed that vitreoretinal traction on the macula is best addressed by vitrectomy and membrane peeling, although surgery is unable to heal altered original retinal vessels. However, it may lower the diffusional barrier between the
retinal compartment and the vitreous cavity. Vitrectomy alone seems to help with
the resolution of exudative macular edema [Lewis et al., 1992; Pendergast et al.,
2000; Lewis, 2001; Yamamoto et al., 2001]. A more complete clearing of potential diffusion barriers is achieved by induction of a posterior vitreous detachment
and by removal of the inner limiting membrane (ILM) from the posterior pole
[Gandorfer et al., 2000; Radetzky et al., 2004; Rosenblatt et al., 2005].
In conclusion, indications for surgery in diabetic eyes can be attributed to
three areas: ischemia, media opacities and tractional forces (table 1). This
review aims to critically discuss indications and expected results of surgical
approaches to diabetic retinopathy and maculopathy.
Surgical Techniques
The 3-port access is standard for vitrectomy in diabetes. Besides the growing miniaturization of intraocular surgery tools, major advances of the past
Joussen/Joeres
70
dramroo@Yahoo.com
years include intraoperative heavy liquids [Chang, 1987; Imamura et al., 2003]
and wide-field lenses, which together allow for a more safe, effective and atraumatic intraocular manipulation [Bartz-Schmidt et al., 1996].
In proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR), posterior vitreous separation is
best achieved or already exists in the midperiphery of the fundus, especially in
eyes previously treated with panretinal photocoagulation. Posterior vitreous
separation outside the posterior pole facilitates finding the cleavage plane
between the retina and epiretinal membranes. This is important when addressing adhesions and fibrovascular proliferations at the vascular arcades. Several
techniques have been proposed to remove diabetic tractional membranes: segmentation technique, delamination and en-block resection of the epiretinal
membranes [Smiddy and Flynn, 1999]. Most surgeons prefer a combination of
the above.
A bimanual technique, e.g., using illuminated infusion lines or illuminated
scissors and forceps, allows to lift up a membrane with one hand, indicating its
connections to the retina, and with the other hand to dissect those connections
in a save and atraumatic way. The bimanual technique is especially useful for
difficult preparations, e.g., widely adherent peripherally located membranes.
Wide-angle systems improve visualization of the retinal periphery. A combined
line for laser and illumination facilitates laser application to the peripheral retina, especially in phakic eyes, where the other hand is free for scleral
indentation.
Silicone oil is also being looked at as a surgical tool. It does not mix with
blood and has been addressed as ‘styptic’ [Kroll et al., 1989], because eventual
postoperative rebleeding remains localized. Therefore, visual rehabilitation
may be accelerated by a silicone tamponade in eyes with active neovascularization. Rapid regression of rubeosis iridis in silicone-filled eyes compared with
gas or aqueous tamponades initiated the hypothesis of a ‘compartmental’ effect
of silicone [Hoerauf et al., 1995; Bartz-Schmidt et al., 1999]. The diffusion of
the retina-based growth factor, namely vascular endothelial growth factor, to
the anterior segment of the eye is supposedly compromised.
If the detachment of the posterior vitreous remains incomplete, Peyman et
al. [2000] suggest intraoperative visualization of the vitreous patches using triamcinolone acetonide [Kimura et al., 2004]. This technique may benefit from
an additional vasoprotective effect of the steroid; however, it has not gained
broad acceptance until now.
The intermediate goals of vitrectomy during the intraoperative time course
have been reviewed by Smiddy and Flynn [1999]: (1) removal of media opacities,
(2) release of anterior-posterior traction, (3) release of tangential traction, (4) segmentation and preparation of epiretinal membranes, (5) support for hemostasis,
(6) appropriate tamponade of retinal holes, and (7) photocoagulation.
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
71
a
b
Fig. 1. Effects of posterior vitreous detachment on diabetic retinopathy. a Posterior vitreous detachment without complications in a healthy individual. b Posterior vitreous detachment
in a diabetic patient. Strands between the hyaloid and retina (e.g., neovascularization or fibrovascular complexes) are torn with the consequence of subhyaloidal or intravitreal hemorrhage.
Nevertheless, with respect to long-term prognosis, panretinal photocoagulation is the most important aim in vitreous surgery for PDR and should be
listed first.
Early Vitrectomy for PDR and Vitreous Hemorrhage
One of the most frequent reasons for vitrectomy is persistent vitreous and
preretinal hemorrhage. Vitreous hemorrhage is most likely a consequence of
ruptured neovascularization at the vitreoretinal interface secondary to a (usually
partial) posterior vitreous detachment (fig. 1). Vitreous hemorrhage was a
major risk factor for severe visual loss in the Early Treatment Diabetic
Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) [Flynn et al., 1992; Fong et al., 1999].
The Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study (DRVS) demonstrated the
efficacy of vitrectomy in a randomized, prospective study. Six hundred and
sixteen eyes with severe diabetic vitreous hemorrhage (visual acuity ⬍1/50)
were randomized to either immediate vitrectomy or a postponed treatment
after 1 year. At the 2-year follow-up visit, 25% of the patients receiving early
vitrectomy demonstrated a visual acuity of 10/20 or better in comparison with
only 15% of the late vitrectomy group (p ⬍ 0.01). Surprisingly, there was a
more obvious benefit in patients with type 1 compared with type 2 diabetes [DRVS
Research Group, 1985a, b]. Later investigations which included an intraoperative panretinal photocoagulation confirmed this trend [Chaudhry et al., 1995].
Joussen/Joeres
72
dramroo@Yahoo.com
A retrospective analysis of eyes with vitreous hemorrhage demonstrated a final
visual acuity of 20/60 in one third of the patients treated [Helbig et al., 1998a].
Accordingly, early vitrectomy should be considered in eyes with vitreous
hemorrhage, precluding laser application, not resolving within 4–8 weeks. The
general aim of the treatment is an early adequate panretinal photocoagulation
(including the outer retinal periphery). As described above, it is advantageous
to perform the panretinal photocoagulation intraoperatively using an illuminated laser probe and scleral indentation to complete the treatment of the
peripheral retina.
When is vitrectomy urgent? In cases of dense hemorrhage, a preoperative
ultrasound examination (B-scan) is advisable to assess the macula. If retinal
detachment is about to extend the macula, or if the macula detached only
recently, then vitrectomy should be performed in due course. Early vitrectomy
is further advisable in eyes lacking previous panretinal photocoagulation. A
severe progressive proliferation of the fellow eye is another reason to perform
vitrectomy instantly [DRVS Research Group, 1990; Smiddy et al., 1995]. In
these conditions, surgical treatment of vitreous hemorrhage in fellow eyes may
help to prevent progression to a tractional retinal detachment. In any case of
associated anterior segment neovascularization (either rubeosis iridis or manifest
neovascular glaucoma), vitreous hemorrhage is an indication for early surgical
intervention. Only instant vitrectomy and complete panretinal photocoagulation
are able to inhibit progression of the neovascular process and to prevent occlusion of the chamber angle [Ho et al., 1992].
Subhyaloidal hemorrhage develops if neovascular bridges tear between the
retina and the posterior hyaloid surface. Spontaneous reabsorption can be postponed in most cases; however, with long-standing detachment, the subhyaloidal
hemorrhage can serve as a scaffold for fibrovascular proliferation between ILM
and the posterior vitreous surface. In these cases, vitrectomy is advisable.
Nd:YAG laser rupture of the posterior hyaloid to allow draining and eventually
resolution of the blood to and in the vitreous cavity should not be attempted.
Incalculable pressure waves may damage the macula.
Early Vitrectomy for PDR with Vitreomacular Traction
Early vitrectomy should be discussed in eyes with fibrovascular proliferation as well as in those demonstrating moderately advanced neovascularization.
The DRVS included 370 eyes with advanced active PDR, without vitreous
hemorrhage and without macular detachment, but with traction on the macula
and a visual acuity of 10/200 or more, which were randomized to either early
vitrectomy or conventional treatment (photocoagulation only). Within 4 years,
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
73
visual acuity of 10/20 or better was achieved in 44% of eyes after early vitrectomy and in 28% of the eyes within the conventional treatment group
(p ⬍ 0.05). The proportion of patients with an insufficient visual outcome was
equally distributed among both groups. The more advanced the neovascularization, the more advantageous early vitrectomy [DRVS Research Group, 1988a,
b; Ho et al., 1992]. Thorough examination of the fellow eye is advisable in these
cases, even if visual acuity is not affected yet.
The decision for early vitrectomy in eyes with active PDR but no macular
traction, no hemorrhage and therefore good visual acuity is controversial. As
indicated earlier, the DRVS did not include photocoagulation during vitrectomy. Today, we demand a photocoagulation as complete as possible prior to
and during vitrectomy, since panretinal photocoagulation is the only means to
inhibit neovascularization and since posterior vitreous separation is facilitated
or induced. Therefore, completion of panretinal photocoagulation is the treatment of choice, even though vitrectomy techniques are less traumatic today
compared with those at the time of the DRVS.
Vitrectomy in PDR Refractive to Panretinal Laser Coagulation
In rare instances, neovascularization does not regress despite a supposedly
complete panretinal coagulation.
• If there is any doubt about a sufficient photocoagulation, it is advisable to further intensify the treatment and increase the number of laser spots per area.
• If it is certain that panretinal photocoagulation is complete, then vitrectomy plus silicone oil tamponade aims at regression/prevention of rubeosis
and ciliary body neovascularization, and at remedy of preretinal neovascularization. Preretinal neovascularization requires the presence of a hyaloid
(fig. 2) [Wong et al., 1989].
Pars Plana Vitrectomy for Tractional Detachment
Despite the fact that pars plana vitrectomy for vitreous hemorrhage without retinal detachment provides considerable visual improvement in the patient,
the functional results in cases of complicated tractional detachment are disappointing although a good anatomical result is achieved.
Helbig et al. [1996, 1998a, b, 2002] report an overall intraoperative
reattachment rate of 86% with persistent reattachment of 82% within 6 months
postoperatively. In contrast, in cases of complete tractional detachment, a
complete reattachment was only achieved in 9 out of 16 cases (56%), which is in
Joussen/Joeres
74
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
Fig. 2. a Right eye of a 52-year-old type 2 diabetic patient. Fibrovascular proliferation
at the optic disc despite panretinal photocoagulation. Because of recurrent hemorrhages and
persistent proliferation, the patient was scheduled for pars plana vitrectomy in order to
induce a posterior vitreous detachment and remove the scaffold for proliferation. b The same
eye 14 years later. The proliferation has settled and there is focal macula edema.
Table 2. Success rates of surgical intervention (final visual outcome ⬎20/400)
Study
Macula attached
(e.g., vitreous
hemorrhage)
Tractional macular
detachment
Remarks
Helbig et al., 1996
94%
52%
Blankenship, 1972
65%
32%
85%, if macular detachment ⬍6
months and lack of rubeosis
42%, if visual deterioration 0–2
months; 20%, if visual
deterioration ⬎13 months
Thompson, 1986
Krampitz-Glas, 1986
79%
71%
64%
38%
accordance with recent reports [La Heij et al., 2004]. In general, long-standing
detachments including the macula signal a bad visual prognosis. Helbig et al.
[1996] demonstrate a 13-fold higher risk of unfavorable outcome (visual acuity
⬍20/400) in cases with preexisting macular detachment. This confirms previous
results (table 2) and supports the concept of ‘early vitrectomy’. The improved
results of more recent reports are likely to be attributable to a better visualization
of the periphery, intraoperative photocoagulation and vitreous tamponade.
Besides macular detachment, risk factors for a reduced final outcome are
preoperative rubeosis iridis and subsequent neovascular glaucoma [Oldendoerp
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
75
and Spitznas, 1989]. Along the same lines, Helbig et al. [1996] describe preexisting secondary glaucoma as a major risk factor for an unfavorable outcome. In
eyes with tractive macular detachment and a preoperative visual acuity of hand
movement or less, only 87% of the cases reached a postoperative visual acuity
of ⬎20/400. On the other hand, eyes with rubeosis iridis and complete retinal
detachment with a duration of more than 6 months have a chance of only 2% for
a final visual acuity of ⬎20/400.
Further, ischemic alterations in the macular as well as vitreopapillary traction damaging the anterior optic nerve and resulting in ischemic optic neuropathy are considered at risk of a poor outcome [La Heij et al., 2004]. Similarly,
eyes with a preoperative vitreous hemorrhage as well as those lacking preoperative photocoagulation maintain a limited prognosis [Rice et al., 1983b].
Should those eyes be treated at all? In our opinion, vitrectomy is recommended in eyes with active neovascularization and long-standing macular
detachment to preserve the eye. Treatment should be performed according to
the guidelines for antineovascular therapy (see below) and aims to prevent
phthisis or secondary glaucoma.
Different considerations apply to tractional retinal detachments outside the
macula. In these cases, the visual prognosis is far better. A defined peripheral
detachment without active proliferation may be observed without surgical intervention. The risk of a severe visual loss in macular-sparing tractional detachment is reported to be 14% per year [Charles and Flinn, 1979; DRVS Research
Group, 1993]. Nevertheless, these cases require a close follow-up to prevent
progression of the ischemic disease including rubeosis and related negative
consequences.
Combined PDR and Proliferative Vitreoretinopathy
Tractional Retinal Detachment
Iatrogenic retinal holes or retinal tears complicating tractional diabetic
membranes herald a severe risk of additional proliferative vitreoretinopathy
type of vitreoretinal traction. We then expect inferior star folds independent of
the retinal vasculature in addition to preexisting tractional membranes associated with retinal vessels. The prognosis will be guarded despite silicone oil tamponade and an additional encircling band. The band is meant to release
anterior-posterior traction at the vitreous base and to support silicone-retinal
contact in the inferior circumference [D. Wong, pers. commun.; Wetterquist et
al., 2004]. A retrospective analysis of 215 consecutive patients with PDR operated on in Cologne demonstrated a rate of 4.1% encircling bands. This is comparable with the study results (3%) of Helbig et al. [1996]. However, in our
Joussen/Joeres
76
dramroo@Yahoo.com
study, the rate of encircling band procedures rose to one third (31.1%), considering only patients with tractional detachment.
Vitreoretinal Surgery in Neovascular Glaucoma
Neovascular glaucoma is the most important reason for enucleation
[Naumann, 1996]. We encounter this problem at two levels of priority: firstly,
clear optical media, rubeosis, chamber angle more or less closed, and intraocular pressure normal or elevated. At this stage, panretinal photocoagulation can
bring the intraocular pressure to normal or prevent a raise [Tasman et al., 1980]
in at least 5%.
Secondly, opaque optical media (vitreous hemorrhage, cataract, corneal
edema) prevent transpupillary laser coagulation of the retina. Controlled coagulation of the retina can only be enforced by eventual removal of the vitreous
and/or lens. Regression of rubeosis iridis has been reported following vitrectomy and endophotocoagulation [Helbig et al., 1998b].
‘Blind’ cryocoagulation of the peripheral retina instead of vitrectomy and
endolaser has been advocated. However, this approach bears the risk of
overtreatment and stimulation of chorioretinal neovascularization [Kirchhof,
1994]. Simultaneously, ‘blind’ cryocoagulation also bears the risk of undertreatment, since the vitreous cavity may not clear up early enough, and vitreoretinal traction may progress before cryocoagulation is effective and the
concentration of growth factors in the vitreous subsides.
Silicone oil tamponade besides compartmentalization (regression of
rubeosis, see above) prevents recurrent vitreous hemorrhages [Bartz-Schmidt et
al., 1999; Psichias et al., 1999] and supports rehabilitation of the patient. At the
beginning of vitrectomy, a near normal intraocular pressure should be achieved,
e.g., by paracentesis, to avoid hemorrhagic choroidal detachment during
surgery. All procedures with extensive disseminated photocoagulation bear a
high risk of choroidal swelling and pressure rise, which can be aggravated by
postoperative bleeding.
Additional endophotocoagulation of the ciliary processes can temporarily
reduce intraocular pressure and improve retinal perfusion. Endocyclophotocoagulation should cover 75% of the ciliary processes. This treatment is best
performed using scleral indentation and illumination by blue-green laser spot
(approximately 100 mW with long-duration pulses until there is a whitish color
change and shrinkage of the ciliary processes). Lasting regulation of the
intraocular pressure can be achieved even in eyes with refractive neovascular
glaucoma by additional partial retinectomy. In a middle-aged person, normal
flow conductivity is reinstalled by a 3-clock-hour retinectomy, extending
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
77
anterior-posteriorly between the ora serrata and half the distance to the retinal
vascular arcade [Kirchhof, 1994, 1999; Joussen et al., 2003]. Since the retinal
barrier against the transition of water cannot be recovered, the effect of retinectomy lasts. Randomized studies investigating this approach to drainage procedures are currently under way.
Lensectomy is considered to be a risk factor for the development of a postoperative rubeosis in eyes with proliferative retinopathy. This raises the question whether lens or intraocular lens (IOL) removal is advisable in eyes with
neovascular glaucoma.
The incidence of neovascularization of the iris after vitrectomy is reported
to be 8–26% in phakic, but 31–55% in aphakic eyes [Oldendoerp and Spitznas,
1989; Helbig et al., 1998a, b]. Nevertheless, lensectomy in combination with
vitrectomy offers the advantage of a more effective and complete anterior vitrectomy and peripheral photocoagulation, which in turn helps to reduce the risk
of the development of iris neovascularization [Bartz-Schmidt et al., 1999]. We
value the original lens more than an artificial implant as a barrier against the
diffusion of growth factors from the retina to the iris and leave the lens as long
as the view to the retina is sufficient.
Vitreoretinal Surgery of Diabetic Maculopathy
A relatively new indication for vitrectomy is persistent macular edema.
Diabetic macular edema is a consequence of blood-retinal barrier breakdown.
Photocoagulation is limited to patients with focal edema and selected cases
with diffuse maculopathy. Up to now, for the ischemic form of diffuse macular
edema there is no promising approach, as for subretinal fibrosis secondary to
long-standing macular edema [Fong et al., 1997].
Since 1996, surgical intervention for macular edema has been more frequently reported. The observation that a posterior vitreous detachment is less
frequently found in patients with diffuse diabetic macular edema led to the assumption that a posterior vitreous detachment could be therapeutically efficient
[Nasrallah et al., 1989, 1998; Lewis, 2001]. Hikichi et al. [1997] report on
resorption of macular edema in 55% of the patients after posterior vitreous
detachment compared with 25% with an attached posterior vitreous.
Since then, multiple authors have demonstrated that vitrectomy including
removal of the posterior vitreous results in a reduction in macular edema and
potential improvement in visual acuity [Lewis et al., 1992; Harbour et al., 1996;
Gandorfer et al., 2000]. Pendergast et al. [2000] demonstrated improvement in
2 lines in 27 out of 55 eyes (49.1%). In a total of 52 out of 55 vitrectomized eyes
(94.5%), improvement in macular edema was achieved. In 45 eyes (81.8%), a
Joussen/Joeres
78
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
Fig. 3. Demonstrates a 34-year-old type 1 diabetic patient, which presented with a best
corrected visual acuity of 20/200 (a). While scheduled for surgery, the patient developed a
spontaneous posterior vitreous detachment after photocoagulation, and visual acuity
improved to 20/30 (b).
complete resolution of the edema was demonstrated after 4.5 months. As
expected, the results with ischemic maculopathy are considerably worse.
Figure 3 demonstrates a young type 1 diabetic patient, who presented to
the clinic with a best corrected visual acuity of 20/200. Scheduled for surgery,
she developed a spontaneous posterior vitreous detachment after photocoagulation, and visual acuity improved to 20/30.
However, there are also reports conflicting with the surgical approach
to macular edema. Yamamoto et al. [2001] measured retinal thickness using
optical coherence tomography in a series of 30 patients and demonstrated
that vitrectomy is able to reduce macular edema; however, this effect is independent of preexisting posterior vitreous detachment. This leads to the assumption that macular edema, at least in part, is kept by cytokines and growth
factors.
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
79
Thus, even though in eyes with persistent diffuse diabetic macular edema
with a taut premacular posterior hyaloid face unresponsive to laser therapy, vitrectomy with removal of the posterior hyaloid appears to be beneficial
[Pendergast et al., 2000]; a careful selection of eyes with favorable preoperative
clinical characteristics may be necessary to improve surgical outcomes
[Harbour et al., 1996; Micelli Ferrari et al., 1999; Ikeda et al., 2000]. Up to date,
there are no randomized multicenter trials which determine the effectiveness of
vitrectomy in diabetic macular edema.
The peeling of the ILM has been shown to be beneficial in patients with a
macular hole by releasing tangential tractional forces [Haritoglou et al., 2002].
The ILM, a pseudomembrane built by the endplates of Müller cells, is thought
to act as a diffusion barrier between the retina and the vitreous. Preliminary
studies have demonstrated a beneficial effect of surgical removal of the ILM for
macular edema. Gandorfer et al. [2000] report pars plana vitrectomy with peeling of the ILM in 12 eyes with diffuse diabetic macular edema. In 10 eyes, the
posterior hyaloid was attached and thickened. Six eyes had undergone macular
photocoagulation previously, and 2 other eyes had been vitrectomized previously. Intraoperatively, the posterior hyaloid was found to be thickened and
completely attached to the macula in 10 eyes. The 2 previously vitrectomized
eyes showed a glistening reflex of the vitreoretinal interface but no premacular
membrane. The posterior hyaloid and the ILM were removed from the macula.
Postoperatively, retinal thickening resolved or decreased in all eyes. Visual acuity improved by at least 2 lines in 11 eyes. Best corrected postoperative visual
acuity developed within 4–12 weeks. No recurrence or deterioration in macular
edema or epiretinal membrane formation were observed during the entire
period of review (mean 16 months, range 8–31 months). Vitrectomy including
removal of the ILM leads to expedited resolution of diffuse diabetic macular
edema and improvement in visual acuity without subsequent epiretinal membrane formation. Thus, complete release of tractional forces and inhibition of
reproliferation of fibrous astrocytes seem to be prudent in the eyes of patients
with diabetes and advanced vitreoretinal interface disease of the macula
[Gandorfer et al., 2000].
However, the effect of ILM peeling is still controversially discussed. A retrospective series of 19 patients with different underlying diseases failed to
demonstrate a significant difference in the visual outcome [Radetzky et al.,
2004]. This retrospective investigation analyzed a series of 23 eyes from 23
patients with persistent macular edema after pars plana vitrectomy with indocyanine green-assisted peeling of the ILM, which suggested that ILM peeling is
ineffective in central retinal vein occlusion and PDR. Improvements were
apparent only in non-PDR. A potential beneficial effect of the surgical therapy
should be weighed against the risk of surgical complications [Radetzky et al.,
Joussen/Joeres
80
dramroo@Yahoo.com
2004]. The lack of long-term improvement in this study is in accordance with
the hypothesis that ILM peeling does not interfere with the mechanism of macular edema.
Currently, a randomized multicenter study is ongoing (TIME, Triamcinolone
versus ILM Peeling in Persistent Diabetic Macular Edema), which investigates
the benefit of ILM peeling in patients with persistent diabetic macular edema
(time-study@uk-aachen.de).
Cataract Surgery
Cataract surgery is the most frequent and most successful surgery in ophthalmology. Improvement in visual acuity after cataract surgery is achieved
despite severe non-PDR in 55% of the patients [Chew et al., 1999].
Nevertheless, the postoperative results in diabetic patients are inferior to
patients without diabetes. The ETDRS reports a gain of 2 or more lines in
64.5% of eyes with early and 59.3% of eyes with delayed photocoagulation
1 year after cataract surgery. A visual acuity of 0.5 after cataract surgery was
only achieved in 46% of eyes with delayed photocoagulation.
In our experience, worsening or development of a macular edema is the
main reason for visual deterioration after cataract surgery. Therefore, every eye
with increased central retinal thickness, even if according to ETDRS no clinically significant macular edema is apparent, should be treated by focal photocoagulation, if an adequate view of the fundus is present. Vice versa, a potential
postoperative worsening of macular edema is no argument against cataract
surgery, but should be treated as indicated below. If during the postoperative
course the edema progresses to a cystic form that is difficult to approach with
photocoagulation, early treatment with intravitreal triamcinolone should be
considered. According to our own experience and published reports [Jonas et
al., 2005], steroid injection is able to efficiently reduce the postsurgical edema
as well as diabetic macular edema. Prospective randomized clinical trials
regarding triamcinolone treatment for diabetic macular edema are currently
under investigation (for further information, time-study@uk.aachen.de).
In eyes of dense cataract, not only the patient’s visual acuity, but also the
fundus view is obscured, and the necessary panretinal photocoagulation is not
adequately possible. In some cases, the use of a crypton laser with a wavelength
in the range of 600 nm is advantageous in the penetration of a nuclear cataract.
In cases of proliferative retinopathy, a panretinal photocoagulation prior
to cataract surgery is urgently advised. If this is rendered impossible, small
incision surgery allows for photocoagulation within a short time after cataract
extraction.
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
81
Cataract surgery itself requires some peculiarities: in order to facilitate
later panretinal photocoagulation or vitrectomy, a large capsulorrhexis is
required as well as an IOL with a large optic. Acryl is the recommended lens
material, as these IOL can be folded and implanted in small incision surgery.
Furthermore, the risk of unfavorable interactions with silicone oil, which could
become necessary in subsequent vitreous surgery, is reduced if acryl is used as
lens material compared with silicone. Silicone oil tends to stick like glue on silicone lenses if close contact occurs.
Without any doubt, phacoemulsification with implantation of a posterior
chamber lens into the capsular bag remains the method of choice for the diabetic
eye. Nevertheless, there are also selected indications for lens extraction with
subsequent aphakia. As indicated previously, coagulation of the ischemic periphery is an essential part of an antiproliferative therapy. The outermost periphery is
easiest approached in aphakic eyes, as is the removal of anterior hyaloid proliferation. Lensectomy or removal of the IOL should be considered in eyes with revision surgery and reduced visual prognosis (e.g., rubeosis and persistent
tractional detachment of the macula) and, according to our experience, is not
associated with a higher complication rate. Previous reports on stimulation of
rubeosis following lensectomy in aphakic eyes did not use the possibility of a
facilitated peripheral photocoagulation. Combination of cataract removal, vitrectomy and endophotocoagulation was only reported in small case series to be
associated with a higher risk of neovascularization of the iris [Blankenship et al.,
1989; Kokame et al., 1989]. The inhibition of ischemia and thus of developing or
existing rubeosis by a radical peripheral vitrectomy and endophotocoagulation
predominates, in our opinion, the stimulation of rubeosis by aphakia.
Conclusion
The project ‘Diabetes 2000’, which was propagated in the 1990s, aimed
to reduce the rate of diabetes patients with visual loss through early diagnosis
and treatment of complications [Patz and Smith, 1994]. Refined materials
and instrumentation, and thus improvement in surgical techniques, allow
preventing complications such as severe anterior hyaloidal fibrovascular
proliferation and severe fibrinoid syndrome [Ho et al., 1992] which have
been frequently seen in the early years of vitrectomy. Nevertheless, even today,
patient expectations of visual rehabilitation cannot be satisfied, and a large discrepancy lies between these expectations and the physician’s hope to limit secondary consequences of rubeotic glaucoma with phthisis bulbi.
The spectrum of indications for surgical interventions in diabetic
retinopathy did not change during the past decade. Helbig et al. [1997, 1998a,
Joussen/Joeres
82
dramroo@Yahoo.com
b, 2002] report on 389 eyes which underwent surgery between 1990 and 1994.
In this series, indications for vitrectomy included 39% vitreous hemorrhages,
13% tractional detachments of the macula, 12% tractional rhegmatogenous
detachment, and 36% severe progressing proliferative retinopathy. A retrospective analysis of the patients at the department in Cologne from 2000 to
2004, which analyzed 361 patients, demonstrated 54% vitreous hemorrhages,
9% tractional detachment including the macula, 4% tractional detachment
without the macula, 7% rubeotic secondary glaucoma, 2% macular edema,
and 1% others.
At present, the major discussion about the value of vitrectomy in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy refers to the optimal time point for intervention
[Helbig et al., 1996]. According to the DRVS, early vitrectomy in cases of
severe vitreous hemorrhage without tractional detachment improves the longterm prognosis in type 1 diabetics despite the immediate risk of the surgical
procedure [DRVS Research Group, 1990]. Earlier in this review, risk factors for
progression have been discussed extensively, e.g., lack of previous panretinal
photocoagulation or tractional detachment of the fellow eye in young diabetics
with insufficient adjustment of blood glucose levels. Without risk profile, in
patients with vitreous hemorrhages, it is allowed to wait until the hemorrhage
clears up (for a maximum of 3 months) and photocoagulation is possible.
Among several exceptions, single eyes, which require quick visual rehabilitation, should be reminded of.
However, the frequency of iatrogenic holes and the risk of reproliferation
can be reduced with the improved surgical techniques. Helbig et al. [1998a, b]
found postoperative detachments in 18% of all vitrectomies. Selecting patients
with pure vitreous hemorrhage reduces the proportion to 5%. Certainly only a
small part of the detachments are induced by iatrogenic retinal holes.
Reproliferation is a major reason [Messmer et al., 1992]. Thus, more recent
publications report on a lower redetachment rate [Helbig et al., 1997, 1998a, b;
Joussen, unpubl.].
The indication for revision surgery in cases with combined rhegmatogenous tractional detachment and cases of ‘ghost cell glaucoma’ after vitreous
hemorrhage should be generously handled.
In general, combined cataract and vitreoretinal surgery is possible in diabetic patients. If possible, we would prefer two separate procedures. In any
case, it is important to perform a sufficient panretinal photocoagulation for
reduction in ischemia and the proliferative stimulus.
Only few years back, silicone oil tamponade was controversially discussed,
but is now an integral component of surgical treatment in diabetic retinopathy.
Silicone oil was described to increase the risk of progression of maculopathy,
damage to the optic disc, and reproliferation [Messmer et al., 1992; Helbig et al.,
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
83
1997]. Whether the differences reported here have any clinical relevance still
remains questionable. Silicone oil tamponade, performed in cases of severe
angiopathy, is not necessarily causally linked to disease progression. Similarly,
reproliferation under oil is more likely attributable to incomplete membrane
removal. Thus, ‘perisilicone proliferation’ [Lewis et al., 1988] should rather be
‘proliferation following incomplete peeling’. In fact, severe postoperative bleeding
can lead to formation of epiretinal membranes requiring revision surgery. We
suggest to perform the revision surgery after an interval of 8–12 weeks following
primary surgery to avoid repeated bleeding and to lower the proliferative vitreoretinopathy rate. In general, silicone oil removal should be attempted after 3
months to prevent formation of secondary glaucoma or cataract formation
[Messmer et al., 1992; Karel and Kalvodova, 1994; Sima and Zoran, 1994].
Summary
•
•
•
•
Despite anatomically satisfying results, vitreoretinal surgery can only partially meet the patient’s expectations of visual rehabilitation.
A complete panretinal photocoagulation and thus reduction in the ischemic
proliferation is key to surgery in eyes with active neovascularization and its
complications. Even in prognostic unfavorable situations with preexisting
rubeosis or persistent tractional detachment involving the macula, surgical
treatment is worthwhile to prevent phthisis or neovascular glaucoma.
There are only small case series regarding the effectiveness of pars plana
vitrectomy in diabetic macular edema. The results of large, randomized
clinical investigations are being awaited.
Besides surgical therapy, a long-term optimization of the blood glucose levels is inevitable [Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group,
1993; Davidson, 1994; UK Prospective Diabetes Study Group, 1998].
References
Bartz-Schmidt KU, Kirchhof B, Heimann K: Primary vitrectomy for pseudophakic retinal detachment.
Br J Ophthalmol 1996;80:346–349.
Bartz-Schmidt KU, Thumann G, Psichias A, Krieglstein GK, Heimann K: Pars plana vitrectomy,
endolaser coagulation of the retina and the ciliary body combined with silicone oil endotamponade in the treatment of uncontrolled neovascular glaucoma. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol
1999;237:969–975.
Blankenship GW, Flynn HW Jr, Kokame G: Posterior chamber intraocular lens insertion during pars
plana lensectomy and vitrectomy for complications of proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Am J
Ophthalmol 1989;108:1–4.
Blankenship GW, Machemer R: Pars plana vitrectomy for the management of severe diabetic retinopathy. An analysis of results five years following surgery. Ophthalmology 1978;85:553–559.
Joussen/Joeres
84
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Blankenship GW, Machemer R: Long-term diabetic vitrectomy results. Report of 10 year follow-up.
Ophthalmology 1985;92:503–506.
Chang S: Low viscosity liquid fluorochemicals in vitreous surgery. Am J Ophthalmol 1987;103:38–43.
Charles S, Flinn CE: The natural history of diabetic extramacular traction detachment. Arch Ophthalmol
1979;97:1268–1272.
Chaudhry NA, Lim ES, Saito Y, Mieler WF, Liggett PE, Filatov V: Early vitrectomy and endolaser photocoagulation in patients with type I diabetes with severe vitreous hemorrhage. Ophthalmology
1995;102:1164–1169.
Chew EY, Benson WE, Remaley NA, Lindley AA, Burton TC, Csaky K, Williams GA, Ferris Fl 3rd:
Results after lens extraction in patients with diabetic retinopathy. The Early Treatment Diabetic
Retinopathy Study report number 25. Arch Ophthalmol 1999;117:1600–1606.
Davidson M: Why the DCCT applies to NIDDM patients. American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists:
AACE guidelines for the management of diabetes mellitus. Clin Diabetes 1994;12:141–144.
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study Research Group: Two-year course of visual acuity in severe proliferative diabetic retinopathy with conventional management. Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy
Study (DRVS) report 1. Ophthalmology 1985a;92:492–502.
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study Research Group: Two-year results of a randomized trial.
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study report 2. Arch Ophthalmol 1985b;103:1644–1652.
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study Research Group: Early vitrectomy for severe proliferative diabetic retinopathy in eyes with useful vision. Results of a randomized trial – Diabetic Retinopathy
Vitrectomy Study report 3. Ophthalmology 1988a;95:1307–1320.
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study Research Group: Early vitrectomy for severe proliferative diabetic retinopathy in eyes with useful vision. Clinical application of results of a randomized trial –
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study report 4. Ophthalmology 1988b;95:1321–1334.
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study Research Group: Early vitrectomy for severe vitreous hemorrhage in diabetic retinopathy. Four-year results of a randomized trial: Diabetic Retinopathy
Vitrectomy Study report 5. Arch Ophthalmol 1990;108:958–964.
Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group: The effect of intensive treatment of diabetes
on the development and progression of long-term complications in insulin-dependent diabetes
mellitus. N Engl J Med 1993;329:977–986.
Flynn HW Jr, Chew EY, Simons BD, Barton FB, Remaley NA, Ferris FL 3rd: Pars plana vitrectomy in
the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study. ETDRS report number 17. The Early Treatment
Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group. Ophthalmology 1992;99:1351–1357.
Fong DS, Ferris FL 3rd, Davis MD, Chew EY: Causes of severe visual loss in the early treatment diabetic
retinopathy study. ETDRS report number 24. Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study
Research Group. Am J Ophthalmol 1999;127:137–141.
Fong DS, Segal PP, Myers F, Ferris FL, Hubbard LD, Davis MD: Subretinal fibrosis in diabetic macular
edema. ETDRS report 23. Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group. Arch
Ophthalmol 1997;115:873–877.
Gandorfer A, Messmer EM, Ulbig MW, Kampik A: Resolution of diabetic macular edema after surgical
removal of the posterior hyaloid and the inner limiting membrane. Retina 2000;20:126–133.
Harbour JW, Smiddy WE, Flynn HW Jr, Rubsamen PE: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular edema
associated with a thickened and taut posterior hyaloid membrane. Am J Ophthalmol 1996;121:
405–413.
Haritoglou C, Gass CA, Gandorfer A, Kampik A: ICG assisted peeling of the retinal ILM.
Ophthalmology 2002;109:1039.
Helbig H: Diabetische Traktionsablatio. Klin Monatsbl Augenheilkd 2002;219:186–190.
Helbig H, Kellner U, Bornfeld N, Foerster MH: Grenzen und Möglichkeiten der Glaskörperchirurgie bei
diabetischer Retinopathie. Ophthalmologe 1996;93:647–654.
Helbig H, Kellner U, Bornfeld N, Foerster MH: Langzeitverlauf des Visus nach Vitrektomie bei diabetischer Retinopathie. Ophthalmologe 1997;94:268–272.
Helbig H, Kellner U, Bornfeld N, Foerster MH: Vitrektomie bei diabetischer Retinopathie: Ergebnisse,
Risikofaktoren, Komplikationen. Klin Monatsbl Augenheilkd 1998a;212:339–342.
Helbig H, Kellner U, Bornfeld N, Foerster MH: Rubeosis iridis after vitrectomy for diabetic retinopathy.
Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 1998b;236:730–733.
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
85
Hikichi T, Fujio N, Akiba J, Azuma Y, Takahashi M, Yoshida A: Association between the short-term natural history of diabetic macular edema and the vitreomacular relationship in type II diabetes mellitus. Ophthalmology 1997;104:473–477.
Ho T, Smiddy WE, Flynn HWJ: Vitrectomy in the management of diabetic eye disease. Surv Ophthalmol
1992;37:190–202.
Hoerauf H, Roider J, Bopp S, Laqua H: Endotamponade mit Silikonöl bei schwerer proliferativer
Retinopathie mit anliegender Netzhaut. Ophthalmologe 1995;92:657–662.
Ikeda T, Sato K, Katano T, Hayashi Y: Improved visual acuity following pars plana vitrectomy for diabetic cystoid macular edema and detached posterior hyaloid. Retina 2000;20:220–222.
Imamura Y, Minami M, Ueki M, Satoh B, Ikeda T: Use of perfluorocarbon liquid during vitrectomy for
severe proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Br J Ophthalmol 2003;87:563–566.
Jonas JB, Akkayun I, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Diffuse diabetic macular oedema treated by intravitreal
triamcinolone acetonide: a comparative, non-randomized study. Br J Ophthalmol 2005;89:
321–326.
Joussen AM, Walter P, Jonescu-Cuypers CP, Koizumi K, Poulaki V, Bartz-Schmidt KU, Krieglstein GK,
Kirchhof B: Retinectomy for treatment of intractable glaucoma: long-term results. Br J
Ophthalmol 2003;89:1094–1103.
Karel I, Kalvodova B: Long-term results of pars plana vitrectomy and silicone oil for complications of
diabetic retinopathy. Eur J Ophthalmol 1994;4:52–58.
Kimura H, Kuroda S, Nagata M: Triamcinolone acetonide-assisted peeling of the internal limiting membrane. Am J Ophthalmol 2004;137:172–173.
Kirchhof B: Retinectomy lowers intraocular pressure in otherwise intractable glaucoma: preliminary
results. Ophthalmic Surg 1994;25:262–267.
Kirchhof B: The contribution of vitreoretinal surgery to the management of refractory glaucomas. Curr
Opin Ophthalmol 1999;10:117–120.
Kirchhof B, Heimann K: Intravitreale Neovaskularisationen nach Diathermiekoagulation. Fortschr
Ophthalmol 1984;81:263–264.
Kokame GT, Flynn HW Jr, Blankenship GW: Posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation during
diabetic pars plana vitrectomy. Ophthalmology 1989;96:603–610.
Kroll P, Gerding H, Busse H: Retinale Proliferationen als Komplikation retinaler Chirurgie mit
Silikonöltamponade. Klin Monatsbl Augenheilkd 1989;195:145–149.
La Heij EC, Tecim S, Kessels AG, Liem AT, Japing WJ, Hendrikse F: Clinical variables and their relation
to visual outcome after vitrectomy in eyes with diabetic retinal traction detachment. Graefes Arch
Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2004;242:210–217.
Lewis H: The role of vitrectomy in the treatment of diabetic macular edema. Am J Ophthalmol 2001;131:
123–125.
Lewis H, Abrams GW, Blumenkranz MS, Campo RV: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular traction and
edema associated with posterior hyaloid traction. Ophthalmology 1992;99:753–759.
Lewis H, Burke JM, Abrams GW, Aaberg TM: Perisilicone proliferation after vitrectomy for proliferative
vitreoretinopathy. Ophthalmology 1988;95:583–591.
Machemer R: Reminiscences after 25 years of pars plana vitrectomy. Am J Ophthalmol 1995;119:
505–510.
Messmer E, Bornfeld N, Oehlschläger U, Heinrich T, Foerster MH, Wessing A: Epiretinale
Membranbildung nach Pars-Plana-Vitrektomie bei proliferativer diabetischer Retinopathie. Klin
Monatsbl Augenheilkd 1992;200:267–272.
Micelli Ferrari T, Cardascia N, Durante G, Vetrugno M, Cardia L: Pars plana vitrectomy in diabetic macular edema. Doc Ophthalmol 999;97:471–474.
Nasrallah FP, Jalkh AE, Van Coppenolle F, Kado M, Trempe CL, McMeel JW, Schepens CL: The role of
the vitreous in diabetic macular edema. Ophthalmology 1998;95:1335–1339.
Nasrallah FP, van de Velde F, Jalkh AE, Trempe CL, McMeel JW, Schepens CL: Importance of the vitreous in young diabetics with macular edema. Ophthalmology 1989;96:1511–1516.
Naumann GOH: Histopathologie des Auges. Berlin, Springer, 1996.
Oldendoerp J, Spitznas M: Factors influencing the results of vitreous surgery in diabetic retinopathy.
1. Iris rubeosis and/or active neovascularization at the fundus. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol
1989;227:1–8.
Joussen/Joeres
86
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Patz A, Smith RE: The ETDRS and Diabetes 2000. Ophthalmology 1994;101:1061–1070.
Pendergast SD, Hassan TS, Williams GA: Vitrectomy for diffuse diabetic macular edema associated with
a taut premacular posterior hyaloid. Am J Ophthalmol 2000;130:178.
Peyman GA, Cheema R, Conway MD, Fang T: Triamcinolone acetonide as an aid to visualization of the
vitreous and the posterior hyaloid during pars plana vitrectomy. Retina 2000;20:554–555.
Psichias A, Bartz-Schmidt KU, Thumann G, Krieglstein GK, Heimann K: Vitreoretinale Chirurgie in der
Behandlung des neovaskulären Glaukoms. Klin Monatsbl Augenheilkd 1999;214:61–70.
Radetzky S, Walter P, Koizumi K, Kirchhof B, Joussen AM: Visual outcome of patients with macular
edema after pars plana vitrectomy and indocyanine green-assisted internal limiting membrane
peeling. Graefes Arch Clin Ophthalmol 2004;242:273–278.
Rosenblatt BJ, Shah GK, Sharma S, Bakal J: Pars plana vitrectomy with internal limiting membranectomy for refractory diabetic macular edema without a taut posterior hyaloid. Graefes Arch Clin
Exp Ophthalmol 2005;243:20–25.
Rice TA, Michels RG, Rice EF: Vitrectomy for diabetic rhegmatogenous retinal detachment. Am J
Ophthalmol 1983a;95:34–44.
Rice TA, Michels RG, Rice EF: Vitrectomy for diabetic traction retinal detachment involving the macula. Am J Ophthalmol 1983b;95:22–33.
Sima P, Zoran T: Long-term results of vitreous surgery for proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Doc
Ophthalmol 1994;87:223–232.
Smiddy WE, Feuer W, Irvine WD, Flynn HW Jr, Blankenship GW: Vitrectomy for complications of proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Functional outcomes. Ophthalmology 1995;102:1688–1695.
Smiddy WE, Flynn HW Jr: Vitrectomy in the management of diabetic retinopathy. Surv Ophthalmol
1999;43:491.
Tasman W, Magargal LE, Augsburger JJ: Effects of argon laser photocoagulation on rubeosis iridis and
angle neovascularization. Ophthalmology 1980;87:400–402.
UK Prospective Diabetes Study Group: Tight blood pressure control and risk of macrovascular and
microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes: UKPDS 38. BMJ 1998;317:703–713.
Wetterqvist C, Wong D, Williams R, Stappler T, Herbert E, Freeburn S: Tamponade efficiency of perfluorohexyloctane and silicone oil solutions in a model eye chamber. Br J Ophthalmol 2004;88:
692–696.
Wong HC, Sehmi KS, McLeod D: Abortive neovascular outgrowths discovered during vitrectomy for
diabetic vitreous haemorrhage. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 1989;227:237–240.
Yamamoto T, Akabane N, Takeuchi S: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular edema: the role of posterior vitreous detachment and epimacular membrane. Am J Ophthalmol 2001;132:369–377.
Antonia M. Joussen
Department of Ophthalmology
Heinrich-Heine University Duesseldorf
Moorenstraße 5
DE–40225 Duesseldorf
Tel. ⫹49 0211 81 17321, Fax ⫹49 0211 81 16241, E-Mail joussena@googlemail.com
Vitreoretinal Surgery for PDR and Macular Edema
dramroo@Yahoo.com
87
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 88–95
Diffuse Diabetic Macular Edema:
Pathology and Implications
for Surgery
Arnd Gandorfer
Vitreoretinal and Pathology Unit, Augenklinik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität,
München, Germany
Abstract
Diffuse diabetic macular edema represents a common problem in diabetic patients. It is
characterized by widespread and poorly demarcated leakage in the macular area. The vitreomacular interface in eyes with diffuse diabetic macular edema is composed of (1) a layer of
native vitreous collagen covering the internal limiting membrane, (2) fibroblasts and fibrous
astrocytes embedded in native vitreous collagen, and (3) mostly multilayered cellular membranes situated on a layer of vitreous collagen in eyes with tangential vitreomacular traction.
Given the poor response of diffuse diabetic macular edema to grid laser photocoagulation,
vitreoretinal surgical techniques including removal of the vitreous cortex and the internal
limiting membrane of the retina have been proposed. In this chapter, the pathology of diffuse
diabetic macular edema and the implications for surgery are discussed.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Diabetic macular edema is the most common cause of decreased visual
acuity in patients with diabetes mellitus, with an incidence between 13.9 and
25.4% over a 10-year period [1]. In patients suffering from type 1 diabetes,
more than 40% will develop macular edema during their lifetime [2].
In clinical terms, there are two patterns of diabetic macular edema: focal
and diffuse. Focal macular edema is characterized by well-defined areas of
leakage. Diffuse diabetic macular edema is characterized by widespread and
poorly demarcated leakage. Whereas focal macular edema can be treated effectively by focal laser photocoagulation [3], diffuse diabetic macular edema
represent a more challenging clinical situation, not responding to grid laser
photocoagulation in up to 24.6% [4].
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Pathophysiology
Causes of diabetic macular edema include increased vasopermeability and
damage to the retinal capillaries and the barrier provided by the retinal pigment
epithelium [5]. Alternatively, or additionally, increased vasopermeability resulting in macular edema may be induced by vitreomacular traction [6]. In a subset of
eyes with diabetic macular edema, the role of the vitreous and – in particular – the
role of the posterior vitreous cortex have become increasingly recognized [7].
Role of the Vitreous and Vitreoschisis
Evidence of a vitreous origin of development and exacerbation of diabetic macular edema arises from several clinical studies. The prevalence of
posterior vitreous detachment (PVD) in patients with diabetic macular edema
is significantly lower than in diabetic patients without macular edema [8].
Spontaneous vitreomacular separation can cause resolution of diabetic macular edema [9].
In 1993, Kishi and Shimizu [10] reported the clinical manifestations of the
premacular vitreous in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. In 94% of their 134
studied eyes with partial PVD, a posterior precortical vitreous pocket was
observed in front of the macula. The posterior border of this pocket was formed
by the premacular cortical vitreous which remained attached to the macula.
Schwartz et al. [11] identified cortical vitreous remaining attached to the
macula (‘vitreoschisis’) during surgery in 145 (81%) of 179 patients with
proliferative diabetic retinopathy and traction retinal detachment. By using
immunochemical staining, they were able to show that the wall of the vitreoschisis
cavity was composed of type II collagen, thus providing direct evidence of the
occurrence of splits in the posterior vitreous cortex [11].
Histopathologic studies in patients suffering from proliferative diabetic
retinopathy disclosed the growth of newly formed blood vessels into the posterior vitreous cortex [12], thereby providing a possible explanation for the low
incidence of progressive diabetic retinopathy in patients with complete PVD
and the significantly higher risk of aggressive proliferation of new blood vessels in patients with partial PVD [13].
In a recent clinicopathological series of 61 eyes with diffuse diabetic
macular edema, only 11% showed complete PVD, whereas 89% had a partially or completely attached vitreous [14]. There was a higher incidence of
complete PVD confirmed intraoperatively in patients with nonproliferative
disease (29%) compared with patients with proliferative diabetic retinopathy
(8%).
Diffuse Diabetic Macular Edema
89
dramroo@Yahoo.com
In summary, vitreoschisis and the presence of a thickened posterior cortical vitreous have been considered to play a key role in disease progression – not
only in terms of neovascularization but also in terms of diabetic macular edema –
and removal of the cortical vitreous has been suggested as one treatment option
of diffuse diabetic macular edema [15].
Ultrastructural Findings of the Vitreous Cortex
We investigated the ultrastructure of the vitreomacular interface in a consecutive series of patients with diffuse diabetic macular edema [14]. Our
approach was based on en bloc removal of the internal limiting membrane
(ILM) together with all epimacular tissue. We found native vitreous collagen
covering the ILM in almost all specimens (60/61). Even in the presence of clinically complete PVD and in eyes which had been vitrectomized previously,
there were remnants of the cortical vitreous present at the vitreal side of the
ILM. These findings emphasize that in diabetic eyes, PVD rarely occurs
between the ILM and the vitreous cortex. Splitting of the vitreous cortex is a
common finding, leaving a layer of cortical vitreous at the vitreoretinal interface. Our results also show that surgical induction of PVD by suction does not
separate the vitreous cortex from the ILM but leaves a layer of collagen
attached to the ILM. Native vitreous collagen was also the major ultrastructural
component of a clinically prominent premacular cortical vitreous which had
previously been called ‘thickened and taut premacular hyaloid’. In these eyes,
fibroblasts, fibrous astrocytes and macrophages were embedded in collagen or
were localized on a layer of vitreous collagen [14].
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor and the Cortical Vitreous
It has been hypothesized previously that the presence of factors capable of
altering vascular permeability may be a more physiological rather than mechanical cause of macular edema [16]. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)
and its receptors as well as interleukin-6 have been localized to cells of vascular
and avascular epiretinal membranes in patients with diabetic retinopathy
[17, 18]. The presence of these and other factors altering vasopermeability, which
are produced by cells within the cortical vitreous, may promote persistence of
macular edema. Antonetti et al. [19] showed that increased levels of VEGF in
the vitreous decrease levels of occludin, a membrane spanning tight junction
protein, which could alter the structure of the retinal endothelial junction and
may account for the increased vasopermeability in patients with diabetic
Gandorfer
90
dramroo@Yahoo.com
macular edema. This finding may also explain the poor response of diffuse diabetic macular edema to grid laser photocoagulation.
Epiretinal Cellular Proliferation
In our series, one third of the studied eyes showed biomicroscopically visible fibrocellular tissue covering the macula [14]. In 9 eyes, a prominent premacular cortical vitreous was associated with obvious signs of vitreomacular
traction such as retinal striae and vessel distortion. The ultrastructure of the
vitreomacular interface in these eyes was characterized by a single-layered or
multilayered cellular component localized on a layer of native vitreous collagen. In all eyes, the vitreous was found partially attached to the posterior pole at
the beginning of surgery. In clinical and ultrastructural terms, these eyes
showed resemblances to the characteristics of vitreomacular traction syndrome
in nondiabetic patients, such as a firm partial attachment of the vitreous to the
posterior pole and a prominent cellular component exerting tangential traction
at the vitreomacular interface [20].
Another 9 eyes demonstrated a prominent cortical vitreous at the macula
and biomicroscopically visible fibrocellular tissue [14]. Specimens of these
eyes showed mostly multilayered cellular membranes situated on a layer of
native vitreous collagen and additional cells embedded within the collagen
layer (fig. 1). In ultrastructural terms, they were hardly distinguishable from
specimens removed from eyes with macular pucker in nondiabetic patients
[21, 22]. However, in clinical terms, the specimens of the present study were not
associated with PVD. There were attachments of the vitreous to the posterior
pole in almost all eyes, and only 1 eye showed no attachment as it had been vitrectomized previously. This is in contrast to epimacular membranes in nondiabetic patients which are associated with PVD in most cases [23, 24].
Current Concepts of Treatment
Grid laser photocoagulation has been shown to reduce leakage in eyes with
diffuse diabetic macular edema. However, up to 25% of eyes do not respond to
therapy. Moreover, despite reduction in leakage in cases of successful grid laser
photocoagulation, the central macular area frequently remains thickened and
cystic spaces develop.
In 1992, Lewis et al. [25] reported that vitrectomy was beneficial in a
series of 10 eyes with diabetic macular traction and edema associated with a
thickened and taut premacular posterior hyaloid. Since this report, there has
Diffuse Diabetic Macular Edema
91
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
c
d
e
f
Gandorfer
92
dramroo@Yahoo.com
been an increasing interest in vitreous surgery as a potential treatment option
for diabetic macular edema [15, 25]. Several groups confirmed that vitreoretinal separation seemed to be beneficial to patients with diabetic macular edema
associated with vitreomacular traction [26–32]. However, even in patients
without visible evidence of posterior hyaloidal traction or thickening, separation of the vitreous from the retina has been reported to result in resolution of
macular edema [17, 33–36].
The ultrastructural findings of the vitreomacular interface in patients with
diffuse diabetic macular edema described above illustrate that resolution of
macular edema following removal of the cortical vitreous may not only be
related to the relief of tractional forces but may also be caused by eliminating
factors enhancing vasopermeability, such as VEGF, and possibly by a better
transport and penetration of oxygen and nutrients through the vitreous cavity to
the macula [37–39].
The surgical technique of epimacular tissue removal is still a matter of
debate. As mechanisms of action of resolution of macular edema following
surgery include release of traction forces and elimination of factors enhancing vasopermeability which are produced or which are concentrated within
the premacular cortical vitreous, removal of the vitreous cortex alone should
be sufficient. However, complete separation of the vitreous cortex from the
ILM is not feasible by mechanical means [40, 41]. In theory and in practice,
removal of the ILM leads to a better resolution of macular edema by removal
of the vitreous cortex and all fibrocellular proliferation [14]. At present, it is
not clear by which other mechanisms ILM peeling works. Beside traction
relief, glial cell proliferation may also play a role in edema resorption as the
ILM which forms the basement membrane of Müller cells is removed
[42–44].
In the future, pharmacologic therapies will have a major impact on retinal
diseases, including diabetic retinopathy and diffuse diabetic macular edema.
Clinical assessment of these therapies in morphological and functional terms
must demonstrate in which patients an intravitreal injection is sufficient and
when advanced vitreoretinal surgical techniques are still required.
Fig. 1. Proliferative retinopathy and diffuse diabetic macular edema associated with
vitreomacular traction from a 66-year-old female. a, b Preoperative fluorescein angiogram
showing diffuse leakage of dye and marked retinal distortion (a 1:25 min; b 5:44 min).
c Transmission electron micrograph of the multilayered membrane shows fibrocytes embedded in vitreous collagen (cross). ⫻4,800. d A macrophage embedded in vitreous collagen.
Asterisk indicates the ILM. ⫻9,600. e, f Postoperative fluorescein angiogram demonstrating
no leakage of dye (e 0:57 min; f 3:31 min).
Diffuse Diabetic Macular Edema
93
dramroo@Yahoo.com
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
Klein R, Klein B, Moss S, Cruickshanks KC: The Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic
Retinopathy. 15. The long-term incidence of macular edema. Ophthalmology 1995;102:7–16.
Javitt JC, Canner JK, Sommer A: Cost effectiveness of current approaches to the control of
retinopathy in type I diabetes. Ophthalmology 1989;96:255–264.
Focal photocoagulation treatment of diabetic macular edema. Relationship of treatment effect to
fluorescein angiographic and other retinal characteristics at baseline: ETDRS report No 19. Early
Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group. Arch Ophthalmol 1995;113:1144–1155.
Lee CM, Olk RJ: Modified grid laser photocoagulation for diffuse diabetic macular edema: longterm visual results. Ophthalmology 1991;98:1594–1602.
Bresnick GH: Diabetic macular edema. A review. Ophthalmology 1986;93:989–997.
Schepens CL, Avila MP, Jalkh AE, Trempe CL: Role of the vitreous in cystoid macular edema.
Surv Ophthalmol 1984;28(suppl):499–504.
Sebag J: Diabetic vitreopathy. Ophthalmology 1996;103:205–206.
Nasrallah FP, Jalkh AE, Van Coppenolle F, Kado M, Trempe CL, McMeel JW, Schepens CL: The
role of the vitreous in diabetic macular edema. Ophthalmology 1988;95:1335–1339.
Hikichi T, Fujio N, Akiba J, Azuma Y, Takahashi M, Yoshida A: Association between the shortterm natural history of diabetic macular edema and the vitreomacular relationship in type II diabetes mellitus. Ophthalmology 1997;104:473–478.
Kishi S, Shimizu K: Clinical manifestations of posterior precortical vitreous pocket in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Ophthalmology 1993;100:225–229.
Schwartz SD, Alexander R, Hiscott P, Gregor ZJ: Recognition of vitreoschisis in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. A useful landmark in vitrectomy for diabetic traction retinal detachment.
Ophthalmology 1996;103:323–328.
Faulborn J, Bowald S: Microproliferations in proliferative diabetic retinopathy and their relationship to the vitreous: corresponding light and electron microscopic studies. Graefes Arch Clin Exp
Ophthalmol 1985;223:130–138.
Sebag J: The Vitreous. Structure, Function, Pathobiology. New York, Springer, 1989.
Gandorfer A, Rohleder M, Grosselfinger S, Haritoglou C, Ulbig M, Kampik A: Epiretinal pathology of diffuse diabetic macular edema associated with vitreomacular traction. Am J Ophthalmol
2005;139:638–652.
Lewis H: The role of vitrectomy in the treatment of diabetic macular edema. Am J Ophthalmol
2001;131:123–125.
Jumper JM, Embabi SN, Toth CA, McCuen BW 2nd, Hatchell DL: Electron immunocytochemical
analysis of posterior hyaloid associated with diabetic macular edema. Retina 2000;20:63–68.
Yamamoto T, Akabane N, Takeuchi S: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular edema: the role of posterior
vitreous detachment and epimacular membrane. Am J Ophthalmol 2001;132:369–377.
Chen YS, Hackett SF, Schoenfeld DL, Vinores MA, Vinores SA, Campochiaro PA: Localisation of
vascular endothelial growth factor and its receptors to cells of vascular and avascular epiretinal
membranes. Br J Ophthalmol 1997;81:919–926.
Antonetti DA, Barber AJ, Khin S, Lieth E, Tarbell JM, Gardner TW, Group PSRR: Vascular permeability in experimental diabetes associated with reduced endothelial occludin content. Diabetes
1998;47:1953–1959.
Gandorfer A, Rohleder M, Kampik A: Epiretinal pathology of vitreomacular traction syndrome.
Br J Ophthalmol 2002;86:902–909.
Kampik A, Green WR, Michels RG, Nase PK: Ultrastructural features of progressive idiopathic
epiretinal membrane removed by vitreous surgery. Am J Ophthalmol 1980;90:797–809.
Kampik A, Kenyon KR, Michels RG, Green WR, de la Cruz ZC: Epiretinal and vitreous membranes. Comparative study of 56 cases. Arch Ophthalmol 1981;99:1445–1454.
Appiah AP, Hirose T, Kado M: A review of 324 cases of idiopathic premacular gliosis. Am J
Ophthalmol 1988;106:533–535.
Wise GN: Clinical features of idiopathic preretinal macular fibrosis. Schoenberg Lecture. Am J
Ophthalmol 1975;79:349–357.
Gandorfer
94
dramroo@Yahoo.com
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
Lewis H, Abrams GW, Blumenkranz MS, Campo RV: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular traction and
edema associated with posterior hyaloidal traction. Ophthalmology 1992;99:753–759.
Gandorfer A, Messmer EM, Ulbig MW, Kampik A: Resolution of diabetic macular edema after surgical removal of the posterior hyaloid and the inner limiting membrane. Retina 2000;20:126–133.
Harbour JW, Smiddy WE, Flynn HW Jr, Rubsamen PE: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular edema
associated with a thickened and taut posterior hyaloid membrane. Am J Ophthalmol 1996;121:
405–413.
Yang CM: Surgical treatment for severe diabetic macular edema with massive hard exudates.
Retina 2000;20:121–125.
Kaiser PK, Riemann CD, Sears JE, Lewis H: Macular traction detachment and diabetic macular
edema associated with posterior hyaloidal traction. Am J Ophthalmol 2001;131:44–49.
Pendergast SD: Vitrectomy for diabetic macular edema associated with a taut premacular posterior
hyaloid. Curr Opin Ophthalmol 1998;9:71–75.
Pendergast SD, Hassan TS, Williams GA, Cox MS, Margherio RR, Ferrone PJ, Garretson BR,
Trese MT: Vitrectomy for diffuse diabetic macular edema associated with a taut premacular
posterior hyaloid. Am J Ophthalmol 2000;130:178–186.
van Effenterre G, Guyot-Argenton C, Guiberteau B, Hany I, Lacotte JL: Macular edema caused by
contraction of the posterior hyaloid in diabetic retinopathy. Surgical treatment of a series of 22
cases. J Fr Ophtalmol 1993;16:602–610.
Ikeda T, Sato K, Katano T, Hayashi Y: Attached posterior hyaloid membrane and the pathogenesis of
honeycombed cystoid macular edema in patients with diabetes. Am J Ophthalmol 1999;127:478–479.
Ikeda T, Sato K, Katano T, Hayashi Y: Vitrectomy for cystoid macular oedema with attached
posterior hyaloid membrane in patients with diabetes. Br J Ophthalmol 1999;83:12–14.
Tachi N, Ogino N: Vitrectomy for diffuse macular edema in cases of diabetic retinopathy. Am J
Ophthalmol 1996;122:258–260.
La Heij EC, Hendrikse F, Kessel AG, Derhaag PJ: Vitrectomy results in diabetic macular oedema
without evident vitreomacular traction. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2001;239:264–270.
Stefansson E, Landers MB 3rd, Wolbarsht ML: Increased retinal oxygen supply following panretinal photocoagulation and vitrectomy and lensectomy. Trans Am Ophthalmol Soc 1981;79:
307–334.
Stefansson E, Landers MB 3rd, Wolbarsht ML: Vitrectomy, lensectomy, and ocular oxygenation.
Retina 1982;2:159–166.
Stefansson E: The therapeutic effects of retinal laser treatment and vitrectomy. A theory based on
oxygen and vascular physiology. Acta Ophthalmol Scand 2001;79:435–440.
Russell SR, Hageman GS: Optic disc, foveal, and extrafoveal damage due to surgical separation of
the vitreous. Arch Ophthalmol 2001;119:1653–1658.
Gandorfer A, Ulbig M, Kampik A: Plasmin-assisted vitrectomy eliminates cortical vitreous remnants. Eye 2002;16:95–97.
Gandorfer A, Rohleder M, Charteris DG, Sethi C, Kampik A, Luthert P: Staining and peeling of
the internal limiting membrane in the cat eye. Curr Eye Res 2005;30:977–987.
Nakamura T, Murata T, Hisatomi T, Enaida H, Sassa Y, Ueno A, Sakamoto T, Ishibashi T:
Ultrastructure of the vitreoretinal interface following the removal of the internal limiting membrane using indocyanine green. Curr Eye Res 2003;27:395–399.
Gandorfer A, Haritoglou C, Kampik A, Charteris D: Ultrastructure of the vitreoretinal interface
following removal of the internal limiting membrane using indocyanine green. Curr Eye Res
2004;29:319–320.
PD Dr. Arnd Gandorfer
Vitreoretinal and Pathology Unit, Augenklinik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
Mathildenstasse 8
DE–80336 München (Germany)
Tel. ⫹49 089 5160 3800, Fax ⫹49 089 5160 4778
E-Mail arnd.gandorfer@med.uni-muenchen.de
Diffuse Diabetic Macular Edema
95
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 96–110
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide
for Diabetic Retinopathy
Jost B. Jonas
Department of Ophthalmology, Faculty of Clinical Medicine Mannheim,
Ruprecht Karls University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract
Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide (IVTA) has been applied in exponentially increasing frequency for various intraocular neovascular and edematous diseases, including diabetic
macular edema, proliferating diabetic retinopathy, neovascular glaucoma due to proliferative
diabetic retinopathy, and chronic prephthisical ocular hypotony as complication of the surgical treatment of diabetic retinopathy. In diabetic macular edema, the edema may almost completely resolve, and visual acuity may increase as much as macular ischemia and the tissue
destruction by the diabetic process may allow. For proliferative diabetic retinopathy and neovascular glaucoma, investigations have suggested an antiangiogenic effect of IVTA. Using a
side effect of IVTA, i.e. steroid-induced elevation of intraocular pressure, IVTA may be
applied for the therapy of chronic prephthisical ocular hypotony due to an insufficiency of
the ciliary body as consequence of a surgical treatment of proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
The complications of IVTA include secondary ocular hypertension in about 40% of the eyes,
medically uncontrollable high intraocular pressure leading to antiglaucomatous surgery in
about 1–2%, posterior subcapsular cataract and nuclear cataract leading to cataract surgery in
about 15–20%, especially in elderly patients within 1 year after injection, postoperative
infectious endophthalmitis with a rate of about 1:500 or 1:1,000, noninfectious endophthalmitis, and pseudo-endophthalmitis. IVTA can be combined with other intraocular surgeries including cataract surgery, particularly in eyes with iris neovascularization due to
diabetic retinopathy. Cataract surgery performed some months after the injection does not
show a markedly elevated rate of complications. If vision increases and eventually decreases
after an IVTA injection, the injection can be repeated. The duration of the effect of a single
IVTA is dosage dependent (about 6–9 months with 20 mg, and about 2–4 months with 4 mg).
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Injecting triamcinolone acetonide intravitreally, Robert Machemer, Yasuo
Tano, Gholam Peyman, Stephan Ryan and other researchers were the pioneers to
consider and use the vitreous cavity as drug reservoir for treatment of intraocular
dramroo@Yahoo.com
diseases such as proliferative vitreoretinopathy [1–4]. Later on, the list of intraocular edematous and neovascular disorders, which may potentially be treatable
by intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide (IVTA), was extended to exudative
age-related macular degeneration and other diseases including various forms of
diabetic retinopathy [5].
Accordingly, recent studies have suggested that IVTA may be useful in
temporarily increasing visual acuity in patients with diffuse diabetic macular
edema [6–37]. Patients of study groups receiving IVTA compared with patients
of control groups without intravitreal injections of triamcinolone acetonide
showed a significant increase in visual acuity during follow-up. The most convincing evidence of the effect of IVTA as treatment for diabetic macular edema
comes from a recent randomized trial by Sutter et al. [26]. They performed a
prospective, double-masked, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial on
69 eyes of 43 patients, with 34 eyes randomized to receive intravitreal triamcinolone (4 mg) and 35 eyes randomized to receive a placebo injection. Eighteen
of 33 eyes (55%) treated with triamcinolone gained 5 or more letters of bestcorrected visual acuity compared with 5 of 32 eyes (16%) treated with placebo
(p ⫽ 0.002). Macular edema was reduced by 1 or more grades as determined
by masked semiquantitative contact lens examination in 25 of 33 treated eyes
versus 5 of 32 untreated eyes (p ⬍ 0.0001). A similar result was reported from
a previous intraindividual inter-eye comparison of patients with bilateral diabetic macular edema who received an unilateral intravitreal injection of about
20 mg triamcinolone acetonide into the more severely affected eye [16]. In the
injected eyes, compared with the contralateral nontreated eyes, visual acuity
increased significantly (p ⬍ 0.001) by 3.0 ⫾ 2.6 Snellen lines. In the contralateral eyes, differences between baseline visual acuity and visual acuity measured
at any of the reexaminations during follow-up were not significant (p ⬎ 0.10).
Correspondingly, gain in visual acuity was significantly higher (p ⬍ 0.05) in
the injected eyes for the measurements obtained up to 4 months after baseline.
In the study group, from a peak in visual acuity at about 2–6 months after the
injection, visual acuity decreased significantly (p ⫽ 0.001) towards the end of
the follow-up, at which visual acuity was still higher, though not significantly
(p ⫽ 0.18) higher, than at baseline. In the control group, visual acuity at the end
of follow-up was lower, though not significantly lower (p ⫽ 0.26), than at baseline. The study confirmed another recent investigation with a similar study
design carried out by Massin et al. [21]. Massin’s study included 15 patients
with bilateral diabetic macular edema unresponsive to laser photocoagulation.
Performing a unilateral injection of 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide, Massin et al.
[21] found a significant reduction in macular thickness. Perhaps due to the
smaller number of patients involved in their study, or due to the smaller dosage
of triamcinolone acetonide injected intravitreally, the authors detected a slight,
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
97
though not statistically significant, increase in visual acuity in the injected eyes
compared with the contralateral eyes without intravitreal injection.
Using a dosage of about 20 mg triamcinolone acetonide, the increase in
visual acuity was most marked for the first 3–6 months after the injection and
could be observed for a period of about 6–8 months [5, 15, 16, 34]. Using a
dosage of 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide, the duration of a reduction in the macular thickness as measured by optical coherence tomography was less than
6 months [7, 19–21, 26]. At the end of the follow-up, visual acuity measurements
returned to baseline values with no significant difference between baseline values and the measurements obtained at the end of the follow-up. Another clinical
investigation evaluated which factors influence change in visual acuity after
intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide as treatment for diffuse diabetic macular edema [36]. Improvement in visual acuity after IVTA was significantly correlated with a lower degree of macular ischemia (p ⬍ 0.001), higher
preoperative visual acuity (p ⫽ 0.002), and a higher degree of macular edema.
Change in visual acuity after the intravitreal triamcinolone injection was statistically independent (p ⬎ 0.20) of age, gender and pseudophakia.
The effect of IVTA with respect to an increase in visual acuity has also
been found in other studies. In a retrospective, interventional, noncomparative
case series study, Ciardella et al. [13] performed an intravitreal injection of
4 mg of triamcinolone acetonide in 30 eyes of 22 consecutive patients with diabetic macular edema refractory to laser treatment. Mean visual acuity improved
from 0.17 ⫾ 0.12 at baseline to 0.34 ⫾ 0.18, 0.36 ⫾ 0.16 and 0.31 ⫾ 0.17 at
the 1-, 3- and 6-month follow-up, respectively. Twelve eyes received 2, 7 eyes 3,
and 2 eyes 4 IVTA injections. The mean interval between the first and second
IVTA injection was 5.7 ⫾ 2.7 months, and between the second and third injection 5.7 ⫾ 3.3 months. Hard exudates were present in the macula at baseline in
all eyes. Progressive reduction in the number and size of the hard exudates was
noted after IVTA in all patients. Intraocular pressure was raised above 21 mm Hg
in 12 (40%) of 30 eyes. The authors concluded that IVTA is a promising treatment for patients with diabetic macular edema refractory to laser treatment.
Similar results were reported in studies performed by Micelli et al. [22],
Karacorlu et al. [18], Gharbiya et al. [14] and Negi et al. [23]. Ozkiris et al. [24]
investigated the efficacy of IVTA by pattern electroretinography. They found
that during follow-up (mean 6.1 months), mean visual acuity and mean P50
amplitude of the pattern electroretinogram improved significantly. Bandello
et al. [12] reported on the combination of IVTA with panretinal laser coagulation
in a patient with bilateral florid proliferative diabetic retinopathy. The contralateral eye only received the panretinal laser coagulation. They found a greater
reduction in retinal thickening and fluorescein leakage from retinal new vessels
in the eye with the combined treatment than in the eye treated only by laser.
Jonas
98
dramroo@Yahoo.com
In a similar manner, Zacks and Johnson [37] described that a combination
treatment of panretinal laser coagulation and IVTA may provide benefit in
patients with diffuse diabetic macular edema who require urgent laser treatment
for proliferative diabetic retinopathy by preventing an exacerbation of macular
edema. Karacorlu et al. [38] reported on the clinical outcome of a patient with
proliferative diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema which progressed
despite grid laser photocoagulation in the macular region. After a single intravitreal injection of 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide, visual acuity increased, macular edema decreased, and the optic nerve head neovascularization markedly
regressed.
It has remained unclear so far whether and how intensively triamcinolone
acetonide crystals injected into the vitreous body may influence the vitreoretinal interface. One may suspect that the crystals, due to their weight, can lead to
a posterior vitreous detachment if the vitreous was not already detached prior to
the injection. A posterior vitreous detachment may have as disadvantage a possibly increased risk of rhegmatogenous retinal detachment. However, so far,
there have been no reports in the literature on a markedly elevated rate of retinal
rhegmatogenous detachments as complication in the follow-up of patients who
received an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide [39–42]. The
advantage of a posterior vitreous detachment in patients with diabetic retinopathy may be a reduction in macular edema, as suggested by studies on pars plana
vitrectomy in patients with diffuse diabetic macular edema, and a decreased
risk of retinovitreal proliferations.
Interestingly, triamcinolone acetonide has not been found in clinically significant concentrations in the serum shortly after intravitreal injections of about
20 mg triamcinolone acetonide [43]. This agrees with clinical observations that
the metabolic control of patients with diabetes mellitus is not markedly influenced by the intraocular application of the steroid.
As a possible alternative to the intravitreal application of triamcinolone
acetonide, the posterior sub-Tenon injection has been reported. Bakri and
Kaiser [44] included 63 eyes of 50 patients with persistent clinically significant
diabetic macular edema involving the center of the fovea 3 or more months after
one or more treatments of focal macular photocoagulation. All patients received
a posterior sub-Tenon injection of 40 mg triamcinolone acetonide. Mean visual
acuity significantly improved from 20/80 to 20/50 at 1 month, then stabilized to
20/65 at 3 months, 20/68 at 6 months, and 20/63 at 12 months. Complications
were rare, with a transient significant rise in intraocular pressure at the 3-month
evaluation and ptosis in 2 patients. Correspondingly, Cardillo et al. [31]
recently reported on a study in which safety and efficacy of intravitreal versus
posterior sub-Tenon capsule injection of triamcinolone acetonide for diffuse
diabetic macular edema were compared. Including 12 patients (24 eyes) with
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
99
bilateral diffuse diabetic macular edema, 1 eye of each patient was randomly
assigned to receive a single 4-mg triamcinolone acetonide intravitreal injection
and the fellow eye to receive a 40-mg triamcinolone acetonide posterior subTenon capsule injection. Both intravitreal and sub-Tenon capsule injections of
triamcinolone acetonide resulted in significant but transient improvements in
central macular thickness. The mean central macular thickness in eyes with
intravitreal injection was significantly thinner than in the sub-Tenon capsuleinjected eyes at 1 month (p ⫽ 0.002) and 3 months (p ⫽ 0.005) after the intervention. Correspondingly, mean visual acuity was significantly better in the
intravitreally injected eyes than in the sub-Tenon capsule-injected eyes at 3 months
after injection (p ⫽ 0.004). The authors concluded that the short-term performance preferred the intravitreal (4 mg) to the sub-Tenon (40 mg) capsule route
for triamcinolone acetonide administration.
Besides, for diffuse diabetic macular edema, IVTA has been used in combination with pars plana vitrectomy for patients with proliferative diabetic
retinopathy in an attempt to use the anti-inflammatory and antiangiogenic
effects of triamcinolone acetonide. A pilot case series study including 29 patients
suggested that intravitreal injection of crystalline cortisone with most of the
vehicle removed may be well tolerated [45]. A following nonrandomized
comparative investigation consisted of a study group of 32 eyes undergoing
pars plana vitrectomy with IVTA and a control group of 32 eyes which were
matched with the study group eyes for preoperative and intraoperative parameters and which underwent pars plana vitrectomy for proliferative diabetic
retinopathy without intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide [46]. The
study group and the control group did not vary significantly in the rate of postoperative retinal detachment, re-pars plana vitrectomy, postoperative enucleation and phthisis bulbi, in best postoperative visual acuity, visual acuity at the
end of the study, and gain in visual acuity. It was concluded that IVTA did not
show a higher than usual rate of postoperative complications and that as a corollary, the adjunct use of IVTA combined with pars plana vitrectomy as treatment
for proliferative diabetic retinopathy did not show a marked therapeutic benefit.
Neovascular glaucoma, a typical end-stage complication of proliferative
diabetic retinopathy, has recently been treated by IVTA, again using the antiangiogenic effect of triamcinolone acetonide [47, 48]. Fourteen eyes with neovascular glaucoma due to proliferative diabetic retinopathy or ischemic central
retinal vein occlusion received an IVTA of about 20 mg acetonide as only procedure (n ⫽ 4 eyes) or in combination with additional procedures such as
goniosynchiolysis (n ⫽ 1) and transscleral peripheral retinal cryocoagulation.
Postoperatively, the degree of iris neovascularization decreased significantly
(p ⫽ 0.02). Considering the 4 patients for whom the intraocular cortisone injection was the only procedure performed, mean intraocular pressure decreased
Jonas
100
dramroo@Yahoo.com
from 26.5 ⫾ 12.1 to 21.75 ⫾ 11.3 mm Hg. This suggests that IVTA, mostly in
combination with a retinal ablative procedure, may be an additional option in
the treatment of neovascular glaucoma.
Progressive ocular hypotony or prephthisical ocular hypotony can be a
complication of ciliary destructive procedures as surgical treatment for neovascular glaucoma due to proliferative diabetic retinopathy. In an attempt to use a
side effect of steroids as desired effect, triamcinolone acetonide was injected
intravitreally into 3 eyes with longstanding prephthisical ocular hypotony
[49, 50]. In all 3 patients, intraocular pressure and visual acuity increased after
the injection, associated with a stabilization of the eyes. It suggests that in some
eyes with long-standing prephthisical ocular hypotony, intravitreal injection of
triamcinolone acetonide can be beneficial to increase intraocular pressure and
stabilize the eye.
Cataract is one of the most common ophthalmologic diseases in the elderly
population. Therefore, it is common that cataract is present in eyes additionally
showing other age-related disorders, such as diabetic retinopathy. Since these
diseases may be treatable by intraocular injections of triamcinolone acetonide,
and because intraocular triamcinolone acetonide by itself may further increase a
preexisting lens opacification, it may be useful to combine an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide with cataract surgery. Taking into account that
one has just recently started to clinically evaluate intravitreal injections of triamcinolone acetonide, and in view of the already known complications and side
effects of intraocular triamcinolone acetonide, any additional procedure may
further increase the frequency and enlarge the spectrum of complications of the
new therapy. However, in a recent clinical investigation, frequencies of postoperative infectious endophthalmitis, wound leakage or other corneal wound healing problems, persisting corneal endothelial decompensation, rhegmatogenous
retinal detachment, marked postoperative pain, or a clinically significant decentration of the intraocular lens did not vary between a study group of 60 eyes
undergoing cataract surgery with implantation of a posterior chamber lens and
an additional intravitreal injection of about 20 mg triamcinolone acetonide and
a control group of 290 eyes consecutively receiving IVTA without additional
intraocular cataract surgery [51]. It was concluded that for a mean follow-up of
about 9 months, the frequency and the amount of complications of an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide, such as increased intraocular pressure, do not markedly differ whether the injection is combined with a standard
cataract surgery or not. A similar conclusion was drawn in a study by Lam et al.
[19] on 19 eyes of 15 consecutive diabetic patients with cataract and diabetic
macular edema, in which phacoemulsification with concurrent intravitreal
injection of 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide appeared to be a safe option for
managing diabetics with cataract and diabetic macular edema.
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
101
Since steroids applied in a high dosage may lead to several changes, such
as alterations in collagenous structures and the immunologic status, intraocular
surgery performed after an intravitreal application of triamcinolone acetonide
may have an unusual spectrum of complications. Addressing this question,
a case series study included 22 patients presenting with cataract which had
progressed after a single or repeated intravitreal injection of about 20 mg of
triamcinolone acetonide for the treatment of exudative age-related macular
degeneration or diffuse diabetic macular edema [52]. During routine phacoemulsification surgery, an intraoperative dialysis of the lens zonules with
vitreous prolapse occurred in 1 eye (4.5%). During the postoperative follow-up,
an optically significant decentration of the intraocular lens or infectious
endophthalmitis was not encountered in any patient. It was concluded that
cataract surgery after single or repeated intravitreal injections of about 20 mg
triamcinolone acetonide may not harbor a markedly elevated frequency or a
markedly changed profile of complications of standard cataract surgery.
In patients with dense cataract and iris neovascularization due to proliferative diabetic retinopathy, the lens opacification prevents a transpupillary laser
coagulation of the retina. However, an intraocular intervention such as cataract
surgery will lead to a marked postoperative inflammation if iris neovascularization is additionally present. In that clinical situation, cataract surgery has been
combined with an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide [53]. In the
postoperative period, visual acuity increased, and without additional retinal
ablative treatments, iris neovascularization markedly regressed within the first
5 weeks after surgery. The study suggested that IVTA can be a useful adjunctive
treatment tool in eyes with iris neovascularization undergoing cataract surgery,
and that IVTA may have an antiangiogenic effect.
The use of IVTA is associated with several complications. One of the two
most common side effects of IVTA was the steroid-induced elevation of
intraocular pressure [54–56]. A recent prospective clinical interventional comparative nonrandomized study included 260 consecutive patients (293 eyes)
receiving an intravitreal injection of 20–25 mg triamcinolone acetonide as treatment for diffuse diabetic macular edema, exudative age-related macular degeneration, retinal vein occlusions, uveitis and cystoid macular edema [56].
Intraocular pressure readings higher than 21, 30, 35 and 40 mm Hg were measured in 94 (36.2%), 22 (8.5%), 11 (4.2%) and 4 (1.5%) patients, respectively.
Triamcinolone-induced elevation of intraocular pressure could be treated by
antiglaucomatous medication in all but 3 eyes (1.0%), for which filtering
surgery became necessary. About 40% of the patients developed a secondary
ocular hypertension, starting about 1 week after the injection in few eyes and
occurring about 1–2 months after the intravitreal injection of 20–25 mg triamcinolone acetonide in most eyes, developing an ocular hypertension. Using this
Jonas
102
dramroo@Yahoo.com
dosage, the increase in intraocular pressure lasted about 7–9 months after which
the intraocular pressure measurements return to the normal range without any
further antiglaucomatous medication taken. Younger age was a significant factor contributing to the triamcinolone acetonide-induced increase in intraocular
pressure. Diagnosis of diabetes mellitus or presence of a clinically significant
diffuse diabetic macular edema did not influence the reaction of intraocular
pressure after the injection. It agrees with previous randomized clinical trials
in which diabetes mellitus was not a major risk factor for glaucoma [56].
Therefore, from a clinical point of view, diagnosis of diabetes mellitus may not
be contradictory against IVTA. This fits with another aforementioned study, in
which patients after IVTA did not show any, or only traces of, triamcinolone
acetonide in the serum [43].
Those patients who received a second injection of 20–25 mg triamcinolone
acetonide showed a similar reaction of intraocular pressure to that after the first
injection [56]. This result suggests that if after a first injection intraocular
pressure remained in the normal range, intraocular pressure may also remain in
the normal range after a second injection. In a similar manner, if intraocular
pressure increased after the first injection, a similar rise in intraocular pressure
can be expected after a second injection. So far, there are no reports on a
permanent rise in intraocular pressure after an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide.
Comparing studies using different dosages of triamcinolone acetonide for
intravitreal injection suggests that the higher the dosage, the longer the duration
of the steroid-induced ocular hypertension [7, 10, 16, 17, 20, 21, 26, 27, 34, 35, 58].
The figures of the frequency of secondary ocular hypertension may not be
directly correlated with the dosage injected. In the study performed by Smithen
et al. [58] with the intravitreal use of 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide, a pressure
elevation defined as a pressure of 24 mm Hg or higher during the follow-up was
found in 36 (40.4%) out of 89 patients at a mean of 101 ⫾ 83 days after the
injection. Out of nonglaucomatous patients with a baseline intraocular pressure
of 15 mm Hg or above, 60.0% experienced a pressure elevation, compared with
only 22.7% of those with baseline pressures below 15 mm Hg. In glaucoma
patients, 6 of 12 (50%) experienced a pressure elevation, and this elevation was
not correlated with baseline pressure. Thirty-two patients (36.0%) received
repeated injections, and there was no difference in the incidence of procedure
elevation in patients receiving multiple injections versus those receiving a
single injection. Pressure elevation was controlled with topical medications in
all patients. Using a dosage of 8 mg triamcinolone acetonide, Ozkiris and
Erkilic [59] detected a transient elevation of intraocular pressure above 21 mm
Hg in 20.8% of eyes. The average intraocular pressure rose by 28.5, 38.2, 16.7
and 4.2% from baseline at 1, 3, 6 and 9 months, respectively.
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
103
If further studies confirm the assumption that the frequency of secondary
ocular hypertension after an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide
does not markedly depend on the dosage used, one may assume that relatively
low triamcinolone acetonide dosages are already so high that all steroid receptors are occupied. One has to take into account that the eye makes out about
0.01% of the body volume. Assuming an equal distribution of triamcinolone
acetonide throughout the body, an intravitreal injection of 4 mg is equal to a
intragluteal injection of 40 g, and an intravitreal injection of 25 mg triamcinolone acetonide is equal to a quarter of a kilogram injected intragluteally.
Another complication of IVTA is the postinjection infectious endophthalmitis. In recent studies on patients receiving an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide, the frequency of postinjection infectious endophthalmitis
ranged between 0/700 and 8/992 (0.87%) [60–64]. The risk of an infectious
endophthalmitis may partially depend on the setting of the injection itself. The
studies suggest that if the injection is performed under sterile conditions, the
risk may be less. Histologically, eyes with IVTA and infectious endophthalmitis
show a marked destruction of the whole globe and a morphallaxia-like morphology [65]. It may go along with the clinical observation that patients with
infectious endophthalmitis after IVTA usually have almost no pain. With
respect to susceptibility to infectious endophthalmitis, a recent experimental
study showed that rabbit eyes with IVTA have a significantly higher rate of
apparent intraocular infection than rabbits without IVTA [66]. Concerning the
multiple use of triamcinolone acetonide-containing bottles, another investigation [67] showed that even after 24 h of exposure to the benzyl alcohol preservative, four of five challenge organisms demonstrated moderate growth in the
bottle so that the use of multiple-dose containers of triamcinolone for intravitreal injections may be discouraged.
A ‘sterile endophthalmitis’ has been described to occur after an intravitreal
injection of triamcinolone acetonide [63, 64, 68]. It has been inconclusive so far
whether the solvent agent of triamcinolone acetonide is the cause for the sterile
intraocular inflammation after the injection, and whether the solvent agent
should be removed. The disadvantage of removal of the solvent agent is that the
dosage gets inaccurate [69, 70]. Bakri et al. [71] reported on the use of a
commercially available preservative-free solution of triamcinolone acetonide,
and Hernaez-Ortega and Soto-Pedre [72] described the use of density gradient
centrifugation to remove the preservative.
Postinjection pseudo-endophthalmitis is present if triamcinolone acetonide
crystals are washed from the vitreous cavity into the anterior chamber and settle down in the inferior anterior chamber angle mimicking a hypopyon [73–76].
The diagnostic problem is the differentiation between a painless hypopyon
caused by postinjection infectious endophthalmitis and a pseudo-hypopyon due
Jonas
104
dramroo@Yahoo.com
to triamcinolone acetonide crystals. So far, there have been no reports showing
a corneal endothelial damage or a damage to the trabecular meshwork by the
crystals.
A postinjection, steroid-induced cataract is one of the most frequent complications or side effects of IVTA. In a recent study on 144 phakic eyes which
consecutively received an intravitreal injection of about 20 mg triamcinolone
acetonide for diffuse diabetic macular edema, exudative age-related macular
degeneration and branch retinal vein occlusion, cataract surgery was performed
in 20 eyes (13.9%) 17.4 ⫾ 9.1 months (median 12.7 months, range 8.0–35.5)
after the intravitreal injection [77]. Out of the 20 eyes undergoing cataract
surgery, 19 eyes (95%) had received one intravitreal injection, and 1 eye (5%)
had received two previous injections. It was concluded that in the elderly population of patients with exudative age-related macular degeneration, diffuse diabetic macular edema or branch retinal vein occlusion, intravitreal high-dosage
injection of triamcinolone acetonide leads to clinically significant cataract with
eventual cataract surgery in about 15–20% of eyes within about 1 year after the
intravitreal injection.
In an analysis of longitudinal data from a randomized, double-masked,
placebo-controlled trial of intravitreal triamcinolone for age-related macular
degeneration, Gillies et al. [78] compared 57 phakic eyes in the treatment group
with 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide versus 54 phakic eyes in the control group.
They found that progression of posterior subcapsular cataract by 2 or more
grades in the treatment group was significantly higher among 16 intraocular
pressure responders (51% after 2 years) than among 37 nonresponders
(3%; p ⬍ 0.0001). There was no significant progression of posterior subcapsular cataract in the placebo group or the opposite eye of the treatment group.
Progression of cortical cataracts was also significantly higher among responders than among nonresponders (15 vs. 3%; p ⫽ 0.015). The progression of
nuclear cataracts (13 vs. 3%) was not significantly different between intraocular pressure responders and nonresponders (p ⫽ 0.3). The authors concluded
that although steroid-related cataracts were unlikely to develop in eyes that do
not experience an elevation of intraocular pressure after intravitreal triamcinolone, those eyes that do experience an elevation also have a very high risk of
rapidly experiencing posterior subcapsular lens opacification. They postulated
that the strong association suggests a similar mechanism responsible for the
development of steroid-induced posterior subcapsular cataract and for the
elevation of intraocular pressure.
Direct toxic effects of triamcinolone acetonide on the retina and optic
nerve have not been observed yet, independently of the dosage used.
Correspondingly, a recent safety and efficacy study of an intravitreal fluocinolone acetonide-sustained delivery device as treatment for cystoid macular
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
105
edema in patients with uveitis and other clinical and experimental studies have
not shown a toxic effect of intraocular steroids [39, 41]. The same was found by
Hida et al. [79]. However, a recent study performed by Yeung et al. [80]
reported a possible cytotoxic effect of triamcinolone acetonide. Yeung et al.
[80] cultured a retinal pigment epithelium cell line (ARPE19) and added corticosteroids (0.01–1 mg/ml) or vehicle (benzyl alcohol, 0.025%), diluted in culture medium. Subsequently, the culture medium containing corticosteroid or
vehicle was refreshed daily. After 1, 3 and 5 days, the proliferated amount of
cells with and without corticosteroid treatment was determined. They found
that triamcinolone acetonide caused a significant reduction in cell numbers
throughout the whole range of concentrations when cells were exposed for
more than 1 day. Compared with dexamethasone and hydrocortisone, triamcinolone acetonide showed a higher relative toxicity. The vehicle alone had no
effect. In a similar study, Yeung et al. [81] compared the cytotoxic effect of triamcinolone acetonide on human retinal pigment epithelium (cell line ARPE19)
and human glial cells over a range of concentrations and durations of exposure.
They found that triamcinolone acetonide caused a significant reduction in
the retinal pigment epithelium cell line ARPE19 that had been exposed to the
substance for more than 1 day. Significant reductions in the number of glial
cells were observed as early as day 1. The glial cells appeared to be more susceptible to triamcinolone acetonide. The vehicle of triamcinolone acetonide
had no effect.
In conclusion, the intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide may
possibly open new avenues for the treatment of intraocular edematous and neovascular diseases [82]. However, as for any new therapy, one has to be very
careful since long-term experience has not been available yet. There are many
open issues still to be addressed. What may be the best dosage for which disease
and for which clinical situation? Is the proliferation of retinal pigment epithelium cells in high concentrations of triamcinolone acetonide decreased and,
paradoxically, increased in low concentrations [83]? What is the best mode of
application of triamcinolone acetonide? Is the sub-Tenon application, the subconjunctival application or the retrobulbar application better than the intravitreal injection? Are there other complications than those already described in
clinical studies or after accidental injection of triamcinolone acetonide into the
vitreous cavity? Is it necessary to remove the solvent agent prior to the intraocular injection, and how should the solvent agent be removed? The most fascinating point is that the intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide together
with previous clinical experiences on the use of intravitreal antibiotics and
virustatic drugs makes one infer that retinal diseases may become locally treatable diseases. Unbelievably high intraocular concentrations of drugs become
achievable, and systemic side effects may mostly be avoided.
Jonas
106
dramroo@Yahoo.com
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
Graham RO, Peyman GA: Intravitreal injection of dexamethasone: treatment of experimentally
induced endophthalmitis. Arch Ophthalmol 1974;92:149–154.
Machemer R, Sugita G, Tano Y: Treatment of intraocular proliferations with intravitreal steroids.
Trans Am Ophthalmol Soc 1979;77:171–180.
Tano Y, Sugita G, Abrams G, Machemer R: Inhibition of intraocular proliferation with intravitreal
corticosteroid. Am J Ophthalmol 1980;89:131–136.
McCuen BW 2nd, Bessler M, Tano Y, Chandler D, Machemer R: The lack of toxicity of intravitreally administered triamcinolone acetonide. Am J Ophthalmol 1981;91:785–788.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide for treatment
of intraocular proliferative, exudative and angiogenic diseases. Prog Ret Eye Res 2005;5:
587–611.
Jonas JB, Söfker A: Intraocular injection of crystalline cortisone as adjunctive treatment of diabetic macular edema. Am J Ophthalmol 2001;132:425–427.
Martidis A, Duker JS, Greenberg PB, Rogers AH, Puliafito CA, Reichel E, Baumal C: Intravitreal
triamcinolone for refractory diabetic macular edema. Ophthalmology 2002;109:920–927.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Söfker A, Degenring RF: Intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide for
diabetic macular edema. Arch Ophthalmol 2003;121:57–61.
Bandello F, Pognuz R, Polito A, Pirracchio A, Menchini F, Ambesi M: Diabetic macular edema:
classification, medical and laser therapy. Semin Ophthalmol 2003;18:251–258.
Audren F, Tod M, Massin P, Benosman R, Haouchine B, Erginay A, Caulin C, Gaudric A,
Bergmann JF: Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling of the effect of triamcinolone acetonide on central macular thickness in patients with diabetic macular edema. Invest Ophthalmol
Vis Sci 2004;45:3435–3441.
Bakri SJ, Beer PM: Intravitreal triamcinolone injection for diabetic macular edema: a clinical and
fluorescein angiographic case series. Can J Ophthalmol 2004;39:755–760.
Bandello F, Pognuz DR, Pirracchio A, Polito A: Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide for florid proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2004;242:1024–1027.
Ciardella AP, Klancnik J, Schiff W, Barile G, Langton K, Chang S: Intravitreal triamcinolone for
the treatment of refractory diabetic macular oedema with hard exudates: an optical coherence
tomography study. Br J Ophthalmol 2004;88:1131–1136.
Gharbiya M, Grandinetti F, Balacco Gabrieli C: Intravitreal triamcinolone for macular detachment
following panretinal photocoagulation. Eye 2005;19:818–820.
Islam MS, Negi A, Vernon SA: Improved visual acuity and macular thickness 1 week after intravitreal triamcinolone for diabetic macular oedema. Eye 2005;19:1325–1327.
Jonas JB, Harder B, Kamppeter B: Inter-eye difference in diabetic macular edema after unilateral
intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide. Am J Ophthalmol 2004;138:970–977.
Jonas JB, Degenring R, Kamppeter B, Kreissig I, Akkoyun I: Duration of the effect of intravitreal
triamcinolone acetonide as treatment of diffuse diabetic macular edema. Am J Ophthalmol
2004;138:158–160.
Karacorlu M, Ozdemir H, Karacorlu S, Alacali N, Mudun B, Burumcek E: Intravitreal triamcinolone as a primary therapy in diabetic macular oedema. Eye 2005;19:382–386.
Lam DS, Chan CK, Mohamed S, Lai TY, Lee VY, Lai WW, Fan DS, Chan WM:
Phacoemulsification with intravitreal triamcinolone in patients with cataract and coexisting diabetic macular oedema: a 6-month prospective pilot study. Eye 2005;19:885–890.
Al-Haddad CE, Jurdi FA, Bashshur ZF: IVTA for the management of diabetic papillopathy. Am J
Ophthalmol 2004;137:1151–1153.
Massin P, Audren F, Haouchine B, Erginay A, Bergmann JF, Benosman R, Caulin C, Gaudric A:
Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide for diabetic diffuse macular edema: preliminary results of a
prospective controlled trial. Ophthalmology 2004;111:218–224; discussion 224–225.
Micelli Ferrari T, Sborgia L, Furino C, Cardascia N, Ferreri P, Besozzi G, Sbornia C: Intravitreal
triamcinolone acetonide: valuation of retinal thickness changes measured by optical coherence
tomography in diffuse diabetic macular edema. Eur J Ophthalmol 2004;14:321–324.
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
107
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
Negi AK, Vernon SA, Lim CS, Owen-Armstrong K: Intravitreal triamcinolone improves vision in
eyes with chronic diabetic macular oedema refractory to laser photocoagulation. Eye 2005;19:
747–751.
Ozkiris A, Evereklioglu C, Oner A, Erkilic K: Pattern electroretinogram for monitoring the
efficacy of intravitreal triamcinolone injection in diabetic macular edema. Doc Ophthalmol 2004;
109:139–145.
Ozkiris A, Evereklioglu C, Erkilic K, Tamcelik N, Mirza E: Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide
injection as primary treatment for diabetic macular edema. Eur J Ophthalmol 2004;14:543–549.
Sutter FK, Simpson JM, Gillies MC: Intravitreal triamcinolone for diabetic macular edema that
persists after laser treatment: three-month efficacy and safety results of a prospective, randomized,
double-masked, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Ophthalmology 2004;111:2044–2049.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Degenring RF, Kamppeter B: Repeated intravitreal injection of triamcinolone
acetonide for diffuse diabetic macular oedema. Br J Ophthalmol 2005;89:122.
Krepler K, Wagner J, Sacu S, Wedrich A: The effect of intravitreal triamcinolone on diabetic
macular oedema. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2005;243:478–481.
Sorensen TL, Haamann P, Villumsen J, Larsen M: Intravitreal triamcinolone for macular oedema:
efficacy in relation to aetiology. Acta Ophthalmol Scand 2005;83:67–70.
Larsson J, Zhu M, Sutter F, Gillies MC: Relation between reduction of foveal thickness and visual
acuity in diabetic macular edema treated with intravitreal triamcinolone. Am J Ophthalmol
2005;139:802–806.
Cardillo JA, Melo LA Jr, Costa RA, Skaf M, Belfort R Jr, Souza-Filho AA, Farah ME,
Kuppermann BD: Comparison of intravitreal versus posterior sub-Tenon’s capsule injection of triamcinolone acetonide for diffuse diabetic macular edema. Ophthalmology 2005;112:1557–1563.
Gibran SK, Cullinane A, Jungkim S, Cleary PE: Intravitreal triamcinolone for diffuse diabetic
macular oedema. Eye 2006;20:720–724.
Avci R, Kaderli B: Intravitreal triamcinolone injection for chronic diabetic macular oedema with
severe hard exudates. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2006;224:28–35.
Habib MS, Cannon PS, Steel DH: The combination of intravitreal triamcinolone and phacoemulsification surgery in patients with diabetic foveal oedema and cataract. BMC Ophthalmol 2005;
5:15.
Jonas JB, Akkoyun I, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Diffuse diabetic macular edema treated by intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide. A comparative non-randomised study. Br J Ophthalmol 2005;89:
321–326.
Jonas JB, Martus P, Degenring RF, Kreissig I, Akkoyun I: Predictive factors for visual acuity
change after intravitreal triamcinolone for diabetic macular edema. Arch Ophthalmol 2005;123:
1338–1343.
Zacks DN, Johnson MW: Combined intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide and panretinal photocoagulation for concomitant diabetic macular edema and proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Retina 2005;25:135–140.
Karacorlu M, Ozdemir H, Karacorlu S, Alacali N: Regression of optic nerve head neovascularization in proliferative diabetic retinopathy after intravitreal triamcinolone. Regression of diabetic
optic disc neovascularization after intravitreal triamcinolone. Int Ophthalmol 2004;25:113–116.
Young S, Larkin G, Branley M, Lightman S: Safety and efficacy of intravitreal triamcinolone for
cystoid macular oedema in uveitis. Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2000;29:2–6.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Retinal complications of intravitreal injections of triamcinolone acetonide. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2004;242:184.
Gillies MC, Simpson JM, Billson FA, Luo W, Penfold P, Chua W, Mitchell P, Zhu M, Hunyor AB:
Safety of an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone: results from a randomized clinical trial. Arch
Ophthalmol 2004;122:336–340.
Jonas JB, Degenring RF, Kreissig I, Akkoyun I: Safety of intravitreal high-dose re-injections of triamcinolone acetonide. Am J Ophthalmol 2004;138:1054–1055.
Degenring RF, Jonas JB: Serum levels of triamcinolone acetonide after intravitreal injection. Am J
Ophthalmol 2004;137:1142–1143.
Bakri SJ, Kaiser PK: Posterior subtenon triamcinolone acetonide for refractory diabetic macular
edema. Am J Ophthalmol 2005;139:290–294.
Jonas
108
dramroo@Yahoo.com
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
Jonas JB, Hayler JK, Söfker A, Panda-Jonas S: Intravitreal injection of crystalline cortisone as
adjunctive treatment of proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Am J Ophthalmol 2001;131:468–471.
Jonas JB, Söfker A, Degenring RF: Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide as additional tool in pars
plana vitrectomy for proliferate diabetic retinopathy. Eur J Ophthalmol 2003;13:468–473.
Jonas JB, Hayler JK, Söfker A, Panda-Jonas S: Regression of neovascular iris vessels by intravitreal injection of crystalline cortisone. J Glaucoma 2001;10:284–287.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Neovascular glaucoma treated by intravitreal triamcinolone
acetonide. Acta Ophthalmol 2003;81:540–541.
Jonas JB, Hayler JK, Panda-Jonas S: Intravitreal injection of crystalline cortisone as treatment of
pre-phthisical ocular hypotony. Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2001;239:464–465.
Rodriguez ML, Juarez CP, Luna JD: Intraocular steroids as a treatment for blind painful red eyes.
Eur J Ophthalmol 2003;13:292–297.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Budde WM, Degenring RF: Cataract surgery combined with intravitreal
injection of triamcinolone acetonide. Eur J Ophthalmol 2005;15:329–335.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Cataract surgery after intravitreal injection of triamcinolone
acetonide. Eye 2004;18:361–364.
Jonas JB, Söfker A: IVTA for cataract surgery with iris neovascularization. J Cataract Refract Surg
2002;28:2040–2041.
Wingate RJ, Beaumont PE: Intravitreal triamcinolone and elevated intraocular pressure. Aust NZ J
Ophthalmol 1999;27:431–432.
Bakri SJ, Beer PM: The effect of intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide on intraocular pressure.
Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging 2003;34:386–390.
Jonas JB, Degenring RF, Kreissig I, Akkoyun I, Kamppeter BA: Intraocular pressure elevation
after intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide injection. Ophthalmology 2005;112:593–598.
Spandau UHM, Derse M, Schmitz-Valckenberg P, Papoulis C, Jonas JB: Dosage-dependency of
intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide as treatment for diabetic macular edema. Br J Ophthalmol
2005;89:999–1003.
Smithen LM, Ober MD, Maranan L, Spaide RF: Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide and intraocular pressure. Am J Ophthalmol 2004;138:740–743.
Ozkiris A, Erkilic K: Complications of intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide. Can J
Ophthalmol 2005;40:63–68.
Benz MS, Murray TG, Dubovy SR, Katz RS, Eifrig CW: Endophthalmitis caused by
Mycobacterium chelonae abscessus after intravitreal injection of triamcinolone. Arch Ophthalmol
2003;121:271–273.
Jonas JB, Kreissig I, Degenring RF: Endophthalmitis after intravitreal injection of triamcinolone
acetonide. Arch Ophthalmol 2003;121:1663–1664.
Moshfeghi DM, Kaiser PK, Scott IU, Sears JE, Benz M, Sinesterra JP, Kaiser RS, Bakri SJ, Maturi RK,
Belmont J, Beer PM, Murray TG, Quiroz-Mercado H, Mieler WF: Acute endophthalmitis following
IVTA injection. Am J Ophthalmol 2003;136:791–796.
Nelson ML, Tennant MT, Sivalingam A, Regillo CD, Belmont JB, Martidis A: Infectious and presumed noninfectious endophthalmitis after IVTA injection. Retina 2003;23:686–691.
Parke DW: Intravitreal triamcinolone and endophthalmitis. Am J Ophthalmol 2003;136:918–919.
Jonas JB, Bleyl U: Morphallaxia-like ocular histology after IVTA. Br J Ophthalmol 2004;88:
839–840.
Bucher RS, Hall E, Reed DM, Richards JE, Johnson MW, Zacks DN: Effect of IVTA on susceptibility to experimental bacterial endophthalmitis and subsequent response to treatment. Arch
Ophthalmol 2005;123:649–653.
Bucher RS, Johnson MW: Microbiologic studies of multiple-dose containers of triamcinolone
acetonide and lidocaine hydrochloride. Retina 2005;25:269–271.
Roth DB, Chieh J, Spirn MJ, Green SN, Yarian DL, Chaudhry NA: Noninfectious endophthalmitis
associated with intravitreal triamcinolone injection. Arch Ophthalmol 2003;121:1279–1282.
Rodriguez-Coleman H, Yuan P, Kim H, Gravlin L, Srivastava S, Csaky KG, Robinson MR:
Intravitreal injection of triamcinolone for diffuse diabetic macular edema. Arch Ophthalmol
2004;122:1085–1086; author reply 1086–1088.
Intravitreal Triamcinolone Acetonide for Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
109
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
Spandau UHM, Derse M, Schmitz-Valckenberg P, Papoulis C, Sagstetter BU, Stiefvater KH,
Jonas JB: Measurement of triamcinolone acetonide concentration after filtering of solvent agent.
Am J Ophthalmol 2005;139:712–713.
Bakri SJ, Shah A, Falk NS, Beer PM: Intravitreal preservative-free triamcinolone acetonide for the
treatment of macular oedema. Eye 2005;19:686–688.
Hernaez-Ortega MC, Soto-Pedre E: A simple and rapid method for purification of triamcinolone
acetonide suspension for intravitreal injection. Ophthalmic Surg Lasers Imaging 2004;35:
350–351.
Jonas JB, Hayler JK, Panda-Jonas S: Intravitreal injection of crystalline cortisone as adjunctive
treatment of proliferative vitreoretinopathy. Br J Ophthalmol 2000;84:1064–1067.
Sutter FK, Gillies MC: Pseudo-endophthalmitis after intravitreal injection of triamcinolone. Br J
Ophthalmol 2003;87:972–974.
Moshfeghi AA, Scott IU, Flynn HW Jr, Puliafito CA: Pseudohypopyon after IVTA injection for
cystoid macular edema. Am J Ophthalmol 2004;138:489–492.
Chen SD, Lochhead J, McDonald B, Patel CK: Pseudohypopyon after intravitreal triamcinolone
injection for the treatment of pseudophakic cystoid macular oedema. Br J Ophthalmol 2004;88:
843–844.
Jonas JB, Degenring RF, Vossmerbaeumer U, Kamppeter BA: Frequency of cataract surgery after
intravitreal injection of high-dosage triamcinolone acetonide. Eur J Ophthalmol 2005;15:
462–464.
Gillies MC, Kuzniarz M, Craig J, Ball M, Luo W, Simpson JM: Intravitreal triamcinolone-induced
elevated intraocular pressure is associated with the development of posterior subcapsular cataract.
Ophthalmology 2005;112:139–143.
Hida T, Chandler D, Arena JE, Machemer R: Experimental and clinical observations of the
intraocular toxicity of commercial corticosteroid preparations. Am J Ophthalmol 1986;101:
190–195.
Yeung CK, Chan KP, Chan CK, Pang CP, Lam DS: Cytotoxicity of triamcinolone on cultured
human retinal pigment epithelial cells: comparison with dexamethasone and hydrocortisone. Jpn J
Ophthalmol 2004;48:236–242.
Yeung CK, Chan KP, Chiang SW, Pang CP, Lam DS: The toxic and stress responses of cultured
human retinal pigment epithelium (ARPE19) and human glial cells (SVG) in the presence of
triamcinolone. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2003;44:5293–5300.
Aiello LP, Brucker AJ, Chang S, Cunningham ET Jr, D’Amico DJ, Flynn HW Jr, Grillone LR,
Hutcherson S, Liebmann JM, O’Brien TP, Scott IU, Spaide RF, Ta C, Trese MT: Evolving guidelines for intravitreous injections. Retina 2004;24(suppl 5):S3–S19.
Blumenkranz MS, Claflin A, Hajek AS: Selection of therapeutic agents for intraocular proliferative disease. Cell culture evaluation. Arch Ophthalmol 1984;102:598–604.
Dr. Jost B. Jonas
Universitäts-Augenklinik
Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1–3
DE–68167 Mannheim (Germany)
Tel. ⫹49 621 383 2652, Fax ⫹49 621 383 3803
E-Mail Jost.Jonas@augen.ma.uni-heidelberg.de
Jonas
110
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 111–121
Use of Long-Acting Somatostatin
Analogue Treatment in Diabetic
Retinopathy
Bernhard O. Boehm
Division of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Department of Medicine I,
Ulm University, Ulm, Germany
Abstract
The diabetes epidemic continues unabated, leading to an increasing number of acute
and chronic complications, including sight-threatening proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Currently, there is no accepted pharmaceutical therapy for diabetic retinopathy besides nearnormal glycemia, treatment of hypertension, and dyslipidemia. For an effective treatment of
retinopathy, one would recommend a concept leading to the downregulation of endogenous
angiogenic stimulators and the upregulation of endogenous angiogenic inhibitors, resulting
in a restoration of the balance in angiogenic control. The naturally occurring growth hormone inhibitor, somatostatin, has been suggested as candidate for developing novel therapies. Somatostatin may exert its antiangiogenic effects, both through antagonism of the
growth hormone axis and through direct antiproliferative and apoptotic effects on endothelial
cells. Therefore, the use of long-acting somatostatin analogues will lead to an upregulation of
antiangiogenic signaling. Use of long-acting somatostatin analogues in diabetic retinopathy
would be an important extension of the initial concept that somatostatin is a regulator of
growth hormone secretion only. Currently available analogues have already allowed to modulate the expression of diabetic retinopathy at various disease stages. Somatostatin analogues
remain the only nondestructive therapeutic alternative to patients with proliferative diabetic
retinopathy who have failed to respond to panretinal photocoagulation.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Angiogenesis is a fundamental process of growth and differentiation of
new blood vessels [1]. It involves new vessel formation from preexisting vessels, whereas vasculogenesis involves new vessel growth from endothelial cell
precursors or stem cells [2–4]. Angiogenesis results from multiple signals acting on endothelial cells. Many peptide growth factors and cytokines have been
found that regulate this process.
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Endothelial cells are surrounded by pericytes that regulate the function
of the blood vessels. Regulation of the barrier function by endothelial cells is
an intricate process, requiring coordination of a large number of complex signaling pathways. The breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier, resulting in
leakage of plasma from small blood vessels in the macula, the central portion
of the retina, is responsible for the major part of impaired visual function.
Therefore, macular edema is a clinical correlate of a compromised barrier
function [5, 6].
The development of pathological neovascularization is often associated
with hypoxia/ischemia. Hypoxia and ischemia can be observed both in malignant tumors and in proliferative retinopathies, which includes diabetic retinopathy. Hypoxia is known to stimulate important angiogenic mediators including
vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). This occurs through activation of
hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1 that increases VEGF expression [7, 8]. The
concept that growth factors mediate retinal angiogenesis has been introduced
in 1948 by Michaelson [9]. There is now ample evidence that the development
of diabetic retinopathy is a multifactorial process in which growth factors,
including growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, play an
important role. The lack of inhibitory signals of growth has also been recently
advocated [10–12]. The pathological neovascularization seen in patients with
diabetes mellitus is the response to a rise in the local concentration of molecules that induce such angiogenesis, but it is also due to a fall in the levels of
endogenous molecules inhibiting angiogenesis (fig. 1). One of the most potent
endogenous regulators is pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF), which
serves both as a survival factor for neuronal components of the eye as well as
an essential inhibitor of the growth of ocular blood vessels. In the presence of
a pathological/diabetic milieu, a reduced gene expression of PEDF resulting in
a reduced antiangiogenic activity has been found [13, 14]. This suggests that
an unbalanced expression of angiogenic mediators and antiangiogenic factors
is involved in the development and progression of pathological neovascularization in the diabetic eye [15, 16]. PEDF may also act as an endogenous antiinflammatory factor in the eye. Therefore, decreased ocular PEDF levels may
contribute to an ongoing low-grade inflammation and vascular leakage in diabetic retinopathy [17].
For an effective treatment of retinopathy in people with diabetes mellitus,
one would recommend a concept leading to the downregulation of endogenous
angiogenic stimulators and the upregulation of endogenous angiogenic inhibitors,
resulting in a restoration of balance in angiogenic control [18, 19]. In this review,
we will address the potential role of growth factor inhibitory substances, i.e.
long-acting somatostatin analogues, in diabetic patients with proliferative
retinopathy.
Boehm
112
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Quiescent vasculature
Endogenous angiogenic
factors
Endogenous angiogenic
inhibitors
Angiogenesis
Pro angiogenic factors
• VEGF ↑
• GH, IGF-1 ↑
• Erythropoietin ↑
Angiogenic inhibitors
• PEDF ↓
• SMS ↓
Fig. 1. Unbalanced expression of angiogenic mediators and antiangiogenic factors in
the diabetic eye. GH ⫽ Growth hormone; SMS ⫽ somatostatin.
Diabetic Retinopathy
Diabetic retinopathy is the most severe of the several ocular complications
of chromic hyperglycemia [20]. Diabetic retinopathy affects both type 1 and
type 2 diabetic patients. Because diabetes is so common, although advances in
treatment have greatly reduced the risk of blindness, retinopathy still remains a
significant clinical problem in daily practice [20–22].
Current Approaches to Prevention and Treatment of
Diabetic Retinopathy
Without intervention, proliferative retinopathy will eventually develop in
60% of persons with diabetes, resulting in profound visual loss in almost half of
them. Randomized, controlled clinical trials have shown that medical therapy
providing glucose control at near-normal levels by use of intensive conventional
therapy or continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion significantly retard development and progression of retinopathy in patients with type 1 diabetes [23].
Likewise, intensified treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus will lower the risk of
microvascular complications [24]. Blood glucose control and the control of
lipids also delay progression [25–27].
There is no doubt that an intensified diabetes treatment is effective; however,
in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial, two rather unexpected observations were made, both of which are of considerable importance. First, the differences in progression between the group with ‘tight’ blood glucose control and the
group with standard control did not appear until approximately 2.5 years after the
Somatostatin Analogues and Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
113
initiation of these treatment regimens. Second, about 10% of the patients with
preexisting retinopathy had a transient worsening after the institution of tight
blood glucose control [28]. Early worsening of their retinopathy was found to be
related to increased systemic levels of IGF-1 plus the upregulation of the mitogenic cytokine VEGF and its receptor leading to an unbalanced increase in angiogenic mediators [29, 30]. In diabetic rats, acute intensive insulin therapy markedly
increases VEGF mRNA and protein levels in the retinae. In this setting, retinal
nuclear extracts revealed increased HIF-1␣ levels leading to an increased HIF1␣-dependent binding to hypoxia-responsive elements in the VEGF promoter
[31]. This suggest that a treatment of choice, i.e. intensified diabetes treatment,
may also increase the likelihood of proliferative retinopathy in the short term.
Laser therapy, introduced during the 1960s, is the mainstay in the treatment of
proliferative diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema. However, it always
has to be remembered that laser treatment is a destructive treatment [32, 33].
Novel Concepts – the Growth Factor Hypothesis
Knowledge of the major factors responsible for modulating neovascularization has had significant implications for the development of novel, nondestructive, pharmacologic treatment modalities [34–36]. Proliferative retinopathies
could be prevented by improved metabolic control or by pharmacologically
blunting the biochemical consequences of hyperglycemia. The angiogenesis in
proliferative diabetic retinopathy could also be treated via growth factor blockade by either upregulating endogenous angiogenic inhibitors or by pharmacological blocking. Targets could be VEGF and its corresponding receptor molecule,
IGF-1, as well as the blockade of integrin molecules [35, 36].
Inhibitors of Growth Hormone Action
Inhibition of growth hormone action might be a potential pharmacological
treatment for diabetic retinopathy. Interest in the field has emerged when the spontaneous resolution of proliferative diabetic retinopathy in a woman in whom acute
panhypopituitarism had developed stimulated interest in pituitary ablation as a
treatment for vision-threatening retinopathy [37–39]. Therefore, destruction of the
pituitary by surgery or radiation has been used to treat proliferative retinopathy
[40]. Long-term follow-up of patients who underwent pituitary ablation due to
yttrium-90 implantation for treatment of proliferative diabetic retinopathy
revealed either stabilization or improvement in visual acuity, including improvement in the grading of hard exudates, microaneurysms and hemorrhages [41–43].
Boehm
114
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Growth hormone action is mediated through the IGFs. Preclinical studies
suggested that IGF-1 is not itself a vasoproliferative factor, but rather a strong
permissive agent suggesting that neovascularization cannot occur in its absence
but must be accompanied by other proangiogenic molecules such as VEGF to
stimulate new vessel growth. These studies provide the rationale for the use of
blockers of IGF-1 secretion, either by destroying the pituitary or by more specific inhibition of IGF-1 production [44, 45].
Long-Acting Somatostatin Analogue Treatment in
Diabetic Retinopathy
The peptide somatostatin was defined in the 1960s as a molecule that
inhibits the release of growth hormone. The physiological actions of somatostatin are primarily inhibitory. It affects calcium and potassium ion channels,
leads to tyrosine phosphatase activation, modulates secretion of neuroendocrine
cells, and may also affect cell proliferation [46, 47]. Somatostatin regulates several organ systems, including the retina and vascular endothelial cells, acts as a
classical hormone, a neurohormone, as a neurotransmitter, and exerts autocrine
and paracrine functions.
The biological effects are mediated by 5 membrane-bound specific receptors, SSTR1–SSTR5. All receptors are G-protein-coupled receptors with 7
transmembrane-spanning domains linked to adenylate cyclase. SSTR genes are
widely expressed in normal human eye tissues, with genes for SSTR1 and
SSTR2 being the most widely expressed [48, 49]. SSTR2 and SSTR3 are the
most important receptor subtypes mediating growth hormone secretion and
endothelial cell cycle arrest, retinal endothelial cell apoptosis. SSTR expression
suggests that somatostatin and its analogues will have a target in various compartments of the eye [50–53].
A number of uncontrolled clinical studies have used somatostatin analogue
treatment in the context of diabetic retinopathy [for a summary, see ref. 54, 55].
Various dosages of the somatostatin analogues (minimal dosage per day
150 ␮g, maximal dosage per day 500 ␮g of SMS 201-995; 1,500 ␮g/day of
BMI23014) have been applied to patients with proliferative retinopathy [56–61]
and cystoid macular edema [62]. The drugs were used for a variable length of
time, ranging from 12 weeks up to a maximum of 12 months. Some studies
reported effects on the suppression of growth hormone levels, stabilization of
neovascularizations, resorption of hemorrhages, and reduction in the number of
microaneurysms, respectively. In a case report, effective treatment of a macular
edema was also found [62].
Somatostatin Analogues and Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
115
Two well-controlled trials have studied the delay to laser therapy and
improvements in patients with persistence of proliferations following laser
treatment [63, 64]. Grant et al. [63] have studied patients with severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy or early non-high-risk proliferative retinopathy.
At this stage of diabetic retinopathy, the likelihood for the need of panretinal
photocoagulation is high. The somatostatin analogue octreotide was titrated in
11 patients to the maximally tolerated dose for a 15-month period. From 200 up
to 5,000 ␮g/day octreotide was used. Only 1 of 22 eyes of octreotide-treated
patients required panretinal photocoagulation, whereas 9 of 24 eyes in the control group had to be laser treated. The incidence of ocular disease progression
was only 27% in patients treated with octreotide compared with 42% in patients
with conventional management. This study provided the first clear evidence
that octreotide treatment retarded progression of advanced retinopathy and
delayed the time for laser photocoagulation.
Boehm et al. [64] reported the use of octreotide in a cohort of diabetic patients
with a very advanced stage of proliferative diabetic retinopathy, i.e. the presence of
active proliferations after full scatter laser treatment. Three hundred micrograms
per day of octreotide was used in 9 patients, and 9 patients with standard diabetes
management served as controls. The dose of 300 ␮g/day is roughly equivalent to a
30-mg dose of the long-acting LAR formulation of octreotide. Ophthalmologists
who defined end points of this intervention were masked throughout the study. The
observation period was the longest ever reported in a trial using a somatostatin
analogue for the treatment of diabetic complications. After 3 years of treatment,
the incidence of vitreous hemorrhages was significantly lower in the octreotidetreated patients. Visual acuity was also preserved and significantly improved over
time in the octreotide-treated group. Only in the group of patients with octreotide
treatment, a regression of proliferations and fibrovascular changes, as defined by
stereoscopic photography and fluorescein angiography, was found.
Mechanisms of Efficacy
The effects of octreotide on the progression of retinopathy may be
explained by a least partial systemic suppression of a system overproduction of
growth hormone and a partial correction of the associated imbalance of the
IGF-1 system components. In addition, the recognition that SSTR subtypes are
expressed at the retina provides evidence that a direct inhibition of locally
produced growth factor molecules, including a direct inhibition of angiogenic
response, and an antifibrotic action may also take place.
The expression pattern of both somatostatin and its receptors on various cellular components of the human eye makes it highly likely that somatostatin has
Boehm
116
dramroo@Yahoo.com
regulatory functions. The observed positive effects in cystic maculopathy and the
positive case reports in patients with macular edema make it highly likely that
somatostatin plays a direct role in fluid evasion or resorption. Most probably, the
pigment epithelium cell is responsible for a favorable exchange of fluids.
This suggests that somatostatin may exert direct effects beyond a blockade of
the IGF-1 system, since SSTR subtypes are expressed at various eye components,
including the retina. This may also explain why the growth hormone receptor
blocker pegvisomant was found ineffective in a recently published pilot trial [65].
In a 3-month, open-label study, pegvisomant did not cause regression of the new
retinal vessels in patients with non-high-risk proliferative diabetic retinopathy,
although plasma levels of IGF-1 decreased significantly by 50% [65].
Side Effects of Long-Acting Analogue Treatment
The side effect profile of long-acting analogue treatment includes the gut
and hypoglycemic side effects. This side effect profile has been suggested to
strongly argue against a clinical role for the current somatostatin analogues in the
treatment of diabetes mellitus [66]. Since somatostatin can inhibit a large variety of
physiological functions, including counterregulatory hormone response in the
case of hypoglycemia, all trials (including the ongoing trails with octreotide
LAR) have carefully monitored the safety of somatostatin use. In the Ulm trial, no
severe hypoglycemic events, as defined by help needed from third parties or
requirement of hospital admissions, did occur during an observational period of
almost 3 years. Two patients complained of abdominal discomfort and increased
bowel movements, which could be alleviated by use of an oral pancreatic enzyme
supplementation. No gall bladder stones or sludges were noted on the routine
ultrasound examinations of the abdomen. However, overall likelihood of gallstone formation is increased with long-acting somatostatin analogue treatment.
Long-acting somatostatin analogues can also decrease thyrotropin secretion. Therefore, follow-up procedures should include endocrine management
with thyroid hormone replacement when appropriate [67]. Use of thyroid hormone supplementation in patients with diabetes mellitus will reduce the risk of
hypoglycemia.
Perspective
Knowledge of the major factors responsible for modulating neovascularization has had significant implications for the development of novel,
nondestructive, pharmacologic treatment modalities [67–69]. Substantial
Somatostatin Analogues and Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
117
efforts are under way to develop new therapies that do not result in tissue
destruction inherent to laser treatment, including two large, randomized, phase
III trials evaluating the efficacy and tolerability/safety of long-acting octreotide
(Sandostatin LAR) in preparation for release of full trial results in 2007. Two
phase III trials Sandostatin LAR (CSMS 802 trial: placebo vs. Sandostatin
LAR® 20 and 30 mg and CSMS 804 trial: placebo vs. Sandostatin LAR® 30 mg)
have reported a significant reduction in retinal bleeding. In both trials a risk
reduction of vitreous hemorrhage of approximately 60% for octreotide compared to placebo was seen. In the 804 trial octreotide a delayed the time to
progression of retinopathy as defined by ETDRS severity scale.
Future approaches might include the use of somatostatin analogues as a treatment option for reentry retinopathy and as an adjunct to an ongoing laser therapy,
or even in vitreoretinal surgery [53, 54, 70–72]. Whether such a therapy may also
prove effective for other retinal vascular proliferative diseases such as retinopathy
of prematurity and age-related macular degeneration remains an open question
that deserves attention, given our new understanding of the cellular and molecular
mechanisms by which somatostatin may exert its antiangiogenic effects.
The use of long-acting analogues of the naturally occurring peptide, somatostatin, has evolved as a novel promising therapeutic option for retinopathy over
the last decade. Current clinical evidence supports its use in diabetic retinopathy,
but further clinical evidence from larger treatment groups of longer trial duration
is required. Improved analogues may also help to make the use of somatostatin
analogues an option far beyond the treatment of diabetes retinopathy [53, 54, 72].
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Folkman J: Tumor angiogenesis: therapeutic implications. N Engl J Med 1971;285:1182–1186.
Bdolah Y, Sukhatme VP, Karumanchi SA: Angiogenic imbalance in the pathophysiology of
preeclampsia: newer insights. Semin Nephrol 2004;24:548–556.
Chan-Ling T, McLeod DS, Hughes S, Baxter L, Chu Y, Hasegawa T, Lutty GA: Astrocyteendothelial cell relationships during human retinal vascular development. Invest Ophthalmol Vis
Sci 2004;45:2020–2032.
Grant MB, Afzal A, Spoerri P, Pan H, Shaw LC, Mames RN: The role of growth factors in the
pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy. Expert Opin Investig Drugs 2004;13:1275–1293.
Tornquist P, Alm A, Bill A: Permeability of ocular vessels and transport across the blood-retinalbarrier. Eye 1990;4:303–309.
Cunha-Vaz JG: The blood-retinal barriers system. Basic concepts and clinical evaluation. Exp Eye
Res 2004;78:715–721.
Ferrara N: Vascular endothelial growth factor: basic science and clinical progress. Endocr Rev
2004;25:581–611.
Tang N, Wang L, Esko J, Giordano FJ, Huang Y, Gerber HP, Ferrara N, Johnson RS: Loss of HIF-1
in endothelial cells disrupts a hypoxia-driven VEGF autocrine loop necessary for tumorigenesis.
Cancer Cell 2004;6:485–495.
Michaelson IC: The mode of development of the vascular system of the retina, with some observations on its significance for certain retinal diseases. Trans Ophthalmol Soc UK 1948;68:137–180.
Boehm
118
dramroo@Yahoo.com
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Spranger J, Osterhoff M, Reimann M, Mohlig M, Ristow M, Francis MK, Cristofalo V, Hammes HP,
Smith G, Boulton M, Pfeiffer AF: Loss of the antiangiogenic pigment epithelium-derived factor in
patients with angiogenic eye disease. Diabetes 2001;50:2641–2645.
Boehm BO, Lang G, Volpert O, Jehle PM, Kurkhaus A, Rosinger S, Lang GK, Bouck N: Low content of the natural ocular anti-angiogenic agent pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) in
aqueous humor predicts progression of diabetic retinopathy. Diabetologia 2003;46:394–400.
Boehm BO, Lang G, Feldmann B, Kurkhaus A, Rosinger S, Volpert O, Lang GK, Bouck N:
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy is associated with a low level of the natural ocular anti-angiogenic
agent pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) in aqueous humor. A pilot study. Horm Metab
Res 2003;35:382–386.
Boehm BO, Schilling S, Rosinger S, Lang GE, Lang GK, Kientsch-Engel R, Stahl P: Elevated
serum levels of N(epsilon)-carboxymethyl-lysine, an advanced glycation end product, are associated with proliferative diabetic retinopathy and macular oedema. Diabetologia 2004;47:1376–1379.
Yamagishi S, Matsui T, Inoue H: Inhibition by advanced glycation end products (AGEs) of pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) gene expression in microvascular endothelial cells. Drugs
Exp Clin Res 2005;31:227–232.
Bouck N: PEDF: anti-angiogenic guardian of ocular function. Trends Mol Med 2002;8:330–334.
Gao G, Li Y, Zhang D, Gee S, Crosson C, Ma J: Unbalanced expression of VEGF and PEDF in
ischemia-induced retinal neovascularization. FEBS Lett 2001;489:270–276.
Zhang SX, Wang JJ, Gao G, Shao C, Mott R, Ma JX: Pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF)
is an endogenous antiinflammatory factor. FASEB J 2006;20:323–325.
Gao G, Li Y, Gee S, Dudley A, Fant J, Crosson C, Ma JX: Down-regulation of vascular endothelial
growth factor and up-regulation of pigment epithelium-derived factor: a possible mechanism for
the anti-angiogenic activity of plasminogen kringle 5. J Biol Chem 2002;277:9492–9497.
Stellmach V, Crawford SE, Zhou W, Bouck N: Prevention of ischemia-induced retinopathy by the
natural ocular antiangiogenic agent pigment epithelium-derived factor. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
2001;98:2593–2597.
Aiello LP, Gardner TW, King GL, et al: Diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes Care 1998;21:143–156.
Frank RN: Diabetic retinopathy. N Engl J Med 2004;350:48–58.
World Health Organization: Magnitude and causes of visual impairment. Accessed August 4,
2005, at http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs282/en.
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group. The effect of intensive treatment
of diabetes on the development and progression of long-term complications in insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus. N Engl J Med 1993;329:977–986.
UK Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) Group. Intensive blood-glucose control with sulphonylureas or insulin compared with conventional treatment and risk of complications in patients
with type 2 diabetes (UKPDS 33). Lancet 1998;352:837–853 (erratum published in Lancet 1999;
354:602).
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and
Complications Research Group. Retinopathy and nephropathy in patients with type 1 diabetes four
years after a trial of intensive therapy. N Engl J Med 2000;342:381–389.
UK Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) Group. Tight blood pressure control and risk of
macrovascular and microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes: UKPDS 38. BMJ 1998;317:
703–713.
Wilkinson-Berka JL, Kelly DJ, Gilbert RE: The interaction between the renin-angiotensin system
and vascular endothelial growth factor in the pathogenesis of retinal neovascularization in diabetes. J Vasc Res 2001;38:527–535.
Early worsening of diabetic retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial. Arch
Ophthalmol 1998;116:874–886 (erratum published in Arch Ophthalmol 1998;116:1469).
Lu M, Amano S, Miyamoto K, Garland R, Keough K, Qin W, Adamis AP: Insulin-induced vascular endothelial growth factor expression in retina. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1999;40:3281–3286.
Punglia RS, Lu M, Hsu J, Kuroki M, Tolentino MJ, Keough K, Levy AP, Levy NS, Goldberg MA,
D’Amato RJ, Adamis AP: Regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor expression by insulinlike growth factor I. Diabetes 1997;46:1619–1626.
Somatostatin Analogues and Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
119
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
Poulaki V, Qin W, Joussen AM, Hurlbut P, Wiegand SJ, Rudge J, Yancopoulos GD, Adamis AP:
Acute intensive insulin therapy exacerbates diabetic blood-retinal barrier breakdown via hypoxiainducible factor-1␣ and VEGF. J Clin Invest 2002;109:805–815.
Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group. Photocoagulation for diabetic
macular edema: Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study report number 1. Arch Ophthalmol
1985;103:1796–1806.
Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group. Early photocoagulation for diabetic
retinopathy: ETDRS report number 9. Ophthalmology 1991;98(suppl):766–785.
Aiello LP: Clinical implications of vascular growth factors in proliferative retinopathies. Curr
Opin Ophthalmol 1997;8:19–31.
Duh E, Aiello LP: Vascular endothelial growth factor and diabetes: the agonist versus antagonist
paradox. Diabetes 1999;48:1899–1906.
Ferrara N, Gerber HP, LeCouter J: The biology of VEGF and its receptors. Nat Med 2003;9:669–676.
Poulsen JE: Recovery from retinopathy in a case of diabetes with Simmonds’ disease. Diabetes
1953;2:7–12.
Poulsen JE: Diabetes and anterior pituitary insufficiency. Final course and postmortem study of a
diabetic patient with Sheehan’s syndrome. Diabetes 1966;15:73–77.
Pi-Sunyer FX, Cushman P Jr: Sheehan’s syndrome and diabetes mellitus: observations on the
Houssay phenomenon in man. Am J Med Sci 1972;264:143–147.
Lundbaek K, Malmros R, Andersen HC, et al: Hypophysectomy for diabetic angiopathy: a controlled
clinical trial; in Goldberg MF, Fine SL (eds): Symposium on the Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy.
Washington, Government Printing Office (Public Health Service publication No 1890), 1968.
Sharp PS, Fallon TJ, Brazier OJ, Sandler L, Joplin GF, Kohner EM: Long-term follow-up of
patients who underwent yttrium-90 pituitary implantation for treatment of proliferative diabetic
retinopathy. Diabetologia 1987;30:199–207.
Hyer SL, Kohner EM: Aspects of growth hormone control in diabetes. Aust NZ J Ophthalmol
1990;18:33–39.
Balodimos MC: Treatment of diabetic retinopathy: pituitary ablation and retinal photocoagulation.
Med Clin North Am 1971;55:989–999.
Smith LE, Shen W, Perruzzi C, et al: Regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor-dependent
retinal neovascularization by insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor. Nat Med 1999;5:1390–1395.
Smith LEH, Kopchick JJ, Chen W, et al: Essential role of growth hormone in ischemia-induced
retinal neovascularization. Science 1997;276:1706–1709.
von Wichert G, Jehle PM, Hoeflich A, Koschnick S, Dralle H, Wolf E, Wiedenmann B,
Boehm BO, Adler G, Seufferlein T: Insulin-like growth factor-I is an autocrine regulator of
chromogranin. A secretion and growth in human neuroendocrine tumor cells. Cancer Res
2000;60: 4573–4581.
von Wichert G, Haeussler U, Greten FR, Kliche S, Dralle H, Boehm BO, Adler G, Seufferlein T:
Regulation of cyclin D1 expression by autocrine IGF-I in human BON neuroendocrine tumour
cells. Oncogene 2005;24:1284–1289.
Klisovic DD, O’Dorisio MS, Katz SE, Sall JW, Balster D, O’Dorisio TM, Craig E, Lubow M:
Somatostatin receptor gene expression in human ocular tissues: RT-PCR and immunohistochemical study. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2001;42:2193–2201.
Patel YC: Somatostatin and its receptor family. Front Neuroendocrinol 1999;20:157–198.
Baldysiak-Figiel A, Jong-Hesse YD, Lang GK, Lang GE: Octreotide inhibits growth factorinduced and basal proliferation of lens epithelial cells in vitro. J Cataract Refract Surg 2005;31:
1059–1064.
Baldysiak-Figiel A, Lang GK, Kampmeier J, Lang GE: Octreotide prevents growth factor-induced
proliferation of bovine retinal endothelial cells under hypoxia. J Endocrinol 2004;180:417–424.
Sall JW, Klisovic DD, O’Dorisio MS, Katz SE: Somatostatin inhibits IGF-1 mediated induction of
VEGF in human retinal pigment epithelial cells. Exp Eye Res 2004;79:465–476.
Grant MB, Caballero S: Somatostatin analogues as drug therapies for retinopathies. Drugs Today
(Barc) 2002;38:783–791.
Boehm BO, Lustig RH: Use of somatostatin receptor ligands in obesity and diabetic complications. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 2002;16:493–509.
Boehm
120
dramroo@Yahoo.com
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
Lamberts SWJ, Van Der Lely AJ, De Herder WW, Hofland LJ: Drug therapy: octreotide. N Engl J
Med 1996;334:246–254.
Hyer SL, Sharp PS, Brooks RA, Burrin JM, Kohner EM: Continuous subcutaneous octreotide
infusion markedly suppresses IGF-I levels whilst only partially suppressing GH secretion in diabetics with retinopathy. Acta Endocrinol (Copenh) 1989;120:187–194.
Mallet B, Vialettes B, Haroche S, Escoffier P, Gastaut P, Taubert JP, Vague P: Stabilization of
severe proliferative diabetic retinopathy by long-term treatment with SMS 201-995. Diabetes
Metab 1992;18:438–444.
Lee HK, Suh KI, Koh CS, Min HK, Lee JH, Chung H: Effect of SMS 201-995 in rapidly progressive diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes Care 1988;11:441–443.
Kirkegaard C, Norgaard K, Snorgaard O, Bek T, Larsen M, Lund-Andersen H: Effect of one year
continuous subcutaneous infusion of a somatostatin analogue, octreotide, on early retinopathy,
metabolic control and thyroid function in type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. Acta
Endocrinol (Copenh) 1990;122:766–772.
Shumak SL, Grossman LD, Chew E, Kozousek V, George SR, Singer W, Harris AG, Zinman B:
Growth hormone suppression and nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy: a preliminary feasibility
study. Clin Invest Med 1990;13:287–292.
McCombe M, Lightman S, Eckland DJ, Hamilton AM, Lightman SL: Effect of a long-acting
somatostatin analogue (BIM23014) on proliferative diabetic retinopathy: a pilot study. Eye 1991;5:
569–575.
Kuijpers RW, Baarsma S, van Hagen PM: Treatment of cystoid macular edema with octreotide. N
Engl J Med 1998;338:624–626.
Grant MB, Mames RN, Fitzgerald C, Hazariwala KM, Cooper-DeHoff R, Caballero S, Estes KS:
The efficacy of octreotide in the therapy of severe nonproliferative and early proliferative diabetic
retinopathy: a randomized controlled study. Diabetes Care 2000;23:504–509.
Boehm BO, Lang GK, Jehle PM, Feldmann B, Lang GE: Octreotide reduces risk for vitreous
hemorrhages and loss of visual acuity in patients with high risk proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Horm Metab Res 2001;33:300–306.
Growth Hormone Antagonist for Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group. The effect of a
growth hormone receptor antagonist drug on proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Ophthalmology
2001;108:2266–2272.
Davies RR, Turner SJ, Alberti KG, Johnston DG: Somatostatin analogues in diabetes mellitus.
Diabet Med 1989;6:103–111.
Colao A, Merola B, Ferone D, Marzullo P, Cerbone G, Longobardi S, Di Somma C, Lombardi G:
Acute and chronic effects of octreotide on thyroid axis in growth hormone-secreting and clinically
non-functioning pituitary adenomas. Eur J Endocrinol 1995;133:189–194.
Aiello LP: Clinical implications of vascular growth factors in proliferative retinopathies. Curr
Opin Ophthalmol 1997;8:19–31.
Duh E, Aiello LP: Vascular endothelial growth factor and diabetes: the agonist versus antagonist
paradox. Diabetes 1999;48:1899–1906.
Ferrara N, Gerber HP, LeCouter J: The biology of VEGF and its receptors. Nat Med 2003;9:
669–676.
Porta M, Allione A: Current approaches and perspectives in the medical treatment of diabetic
retinopathy. Pharmacol Ther 2004;103:167–177.
Croxen R, Baarsma GS, Kuijpers RW, van Hagen PM: Somatostatin in diabetic retinopathy.
Pediatr Endocrinol Rev 2004;1(suppl 3):518–524.
Bernhard O. Boehm, MD
Division of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Ulm University
Robert-Koch-Strasse 8
DE–89081 Ulm (Germany)
Tel. ⫹49 731 500 44504, Fax ⫹49 731 500 44506, E-Mail bernhard.boehm@uniklinik-ulm.de
Somatostatin Analogues and Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
121
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 122–148
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor
and the Potential Therapeutic Use of
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic
Retinopathy
Carla Staritaa, Manju Patelb, Barrett Katzc, Anthony P. Adamisc
a
Pfizer Ltd., Sandwich, UK; bPfizer Inc., and c(OSI) Eyetech, New York, N.Y., USA
Abstract
Both clinical and preclinical findings have implicated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the pathophysiology of diabetic macular edema (DME). VEGF is both a
potent enhancer of vascular permeability and a key inducer of angiogenesis. VEGF levels are
elevated in the eyes of patients with DME, and in animal models of diabetes this elevation
coincides with the breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier. Moreover, injection of VEGF (the
VEGF165 isoform in particular) into healthy eyes of animals can induce diabetes-associated
ocular pathologies.Pegaptanib, a novel RNA aptamer currently used in the treatment of agerelated macular degeneration, binds and inactivates VEGF165 and has been shown in animal
models to reverse the blood-retinal barrier breakdown associated with diabetes. These findings formed the basis of a phase II trial involving 172 patients with DME, in which intravitreous pegaptanib (0.3 mg, 1 mg, 3 mg) or sham injections were administered every 6 weeks
for 12 weeks, with the option of continuing for 18 more weeks or undergoing laser treatment.
Compared to sham, patients receiving 0.3 mg displayed superior visual acuity (p ⫽ 0.04) as
well as a reduction in retinal thickness of 68 micrometers compared to a slight increase under
sham treatment (p ⫽ 0.021). These data support the use of pegaptanib in the treatment of
DME.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Diabetic retinopathy, a retinal vascular disorder that occurs as a complication of diabetes mellitus, is one of the leading causes of blindness worldwide.
It accounts for an estimated 15–17% of the 2.7 million individuals suffering
from blindness in the European Union [1]. In the United States, an estimated
4.1 million individuals aged 40 and over are affected by diabetic retinopathy,
with nearly 900,000 having vision-threatening disease [2]. Furthermore, the
dramroo@Yahoo.com
prevalence of diabetic retinopathy is expected to rise as the number of people
with diabetes increases due to the demographic effects of population growth,
aging and urbanization and the growing prevalence of obesity and physical
inactivity [3]. This will further add to the human and economic burden that
diabetic retinopathy and its ensuing vision loss are already imposing on our
society [2].
Severe visual loss in patients with diabetes occurs primarily as a consequence of retinal neovascularization and complications resulting from intraocular angiogenesis; moderate visual loss results primarily from diabetic macular
edema (DME) related to altered permeability of the retinal vasculature.
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy is more commonly reported in patients with
type 1 diabetes, whereas DME is more commonly associated with type 2 diabetes [4]. While the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy is incompletely understood, evidence suggests that it is one of several ocular diseases characterized
by neovascularization and increased vascular leakage ultimately driven by the
effects of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) [5–7].
Laser photocoagulation is the current standard of care for the treatment of
sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy. Focal photocoagulation, primarily used
for treating DME, applies small-sized burns to leaking microaneurysms, while
scatter (panretinal) photocoagulation is employed for proliferative retinopathy
and indirectly treats neovascularization by placing burns throughout the fundus
[8]. While the use of laser photocoagulation has greatly reduced the risk of
developing severe vision loss, this is accomplished by attendant destruction of
retinal tissue that can lead to side effects, such as loss of peripheral vision, alterations in color perception, and perceptions of night blindness. Pars plana vitrectomy is another option for treating complications of severe proliferative
retinopathy and/or hemorrhage [5, 8]. Although instrumentation and surgical
techniques have improved during the past decade [9], pars plana vitrectomy is
still associated with several complications [5, 9–11], and for this reason, visual
acuity (VA) outcomes are still poor [9].
The mechanism by which scatter laser photocoagulation reduces proliferative retinopathy is not known. It has been proposed that light energy
absorbed by melanin in the retinal pigment epithelium destroys highly metabolically active outer retinal cells, reducing retinal oxygen consumption and
facilitating improved oxygen diffusion from the choriocapillaris through the
laser scars [12]. Increased oxygen tension may lead to vasoconstriction, further reducing the edema. Therefore, laser photocoagulation is directed at
reducing the retinal neovascularization or macular edema rather than reversing the underlying biological process of diabetic retinopathy. The risk of VA
loss is reduced, and substantial recovery of reduced VA is relatively unusual
[4, 5, 13].
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
123
Because of the limitations, potential side effects and complications of currently available treatments for diabetic retinopathy, research continues to be
directed toward the development of novel, more effective and nondestructive therapeutic modalities. Over the past decade, a large body of work has established
VEGF as a major regulator of both physiological and pathological vessel growth
and vascular permeability, and that it plays a key role in ocular neovascular diseases, such as age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy [6].
Importantly, studies in animal models have demonstrated that the single isoform
VEGF164 (the rodent counterpart of human VEGF165) is particularly important in
the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy [14].
Macugen® (pegaptanib sodium), a pegylated synthetic ribonucleic acid
(RNA) oligonucleotide, specifically inhibits the actions of VEGF165 [15]. The
oligonucleotide portion of the molecule, called an aptamer, was designed to
bind selectively to extracellular VEGF165 as compared with antisense oligonucleotides, which have an intracellular site of action. To increase the in vivo residence time of pegaptanib, a 40-kDa branched polyethylene glycol molecule has
been conjugated to the oligonucleotide. Based on the efficacy demonstrated in
two large, multicenter, randomized clinical trials (the VEGF Inhibition Study in
Ocular Neovascularization, or VISION, trials) [16], Macugen has been approved
for the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration in the United
States, Canada and Brazil and has received a recommendation for market authorization by the Committee for Human Medicinal Products of the European
Union. The selective pharmacologic blockade of the 165 isoform of VEGF with
pegaptanib also has potential applicability in the treatment of other diseases
characterized by retinal revascularization and increased retinal vascular permeability. Indeed, a phase II clinical trial exploring its safety and efficacy in
patients with DME has reported encouraging early results [17].
This chapter will first review the role of VEGF165 in the pathogenesis of ocular neovascular diseases, including diabetic retinopathy. A description of the development of pegaptanib sodium as an anti-VEGF agent will follow, together with a
review and discussion of the recent phase II clinical trial evaluating its use in patients
with DME [17]. The findings from this trial not only validate the hypothesis that
VEGF165 plays an important role in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy, but
also offer the promise of a new and less destructive treatment option for DME.
VEGF in Ocular Neovascular Disease
VEGF Is a Pluripotent Growth Factor
VEGF (also known as VEGF-A) is a member of the VEGF-plateletderived growth factor family, which also includes VEGF-B, VEGF-C, VEGF-D
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
124
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 1. Pro- and antiangiogenic factors [21]
Proangiogenic factors
Antiangiogenic factors
Adrenomedullin
Angiogenin
Angiopoietin-1
Angiopoietin-related growth factor
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor
Corticotropin-releasing hormone
Cyr16
Erythropoietin
Fibroblast growth factors: acidic and basic
Follistatin
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor
Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor
IL-3, IL-8
Midkine
Nerve growth factor
Neurokinin A
Neuropeptide Y
Pigment epithelium-derived growth factor
Placental growth factor
Platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor
Platelet-derived growth factor
Pleiotrophin
Progranulin
Proliferin
Secretoneurin
Substance P
Transforming growth factor-␣
Transforming growth factor-␤
Tumor necrosis factor-␣
VEGF
Angioarrestin
Angiostatin (plasminogen fragment)
Antiangiogenic antithrombin III
Cartilage-derived inhibitor
CD59 complement fragment
Endostatin (collagen XVIII fragment)
Fibronectin fragment
Growth-related oncogene (Gro-␤)
Heparinases
Heparin hexasaccharide fragment
Human chorionic gonadotropin
IL-12
Interferon-␣, -␤, -␥
Interferon-inducible protein (IP-10)
Kringle 5 (plasminogen fragment)
Metalloproteinase inhibitors
Pigment epithelium-derived growth
factor
Placental ribonuclease inhibitor
Plasminogen activator inhibitor
Platelet factor 4
Prolactin, 16-kDa fragment
Proliferin-related protein
Retinoids
Tetrahydrocortisol-S
Thrombospondin-1
Transforming growth factor-␤
2-Methoxyestradiol
Vasculostatin
Vasostatin (calreticulin fragment)
and VEGF-E [for a general review of VEGF, see ref. 18]. It was isolated independently by 2 groups, first as a vascular permeability factor [19] and second
as a potent endothelial cell mitogen [20]. Although investigations during the
1980s suggested numerous proangiogenic and antiangiogenic factors, in a list
that has since continued to grow (table 1) [21], only VEGF convincingly
showed all the characteristics of a necessary and sufficient inducer of angiogenesis [22]. Alternative splicing of the VEGF gene yields at least 6 distinct biologically active human isoforms, each comprised of a differing number of
amino acids (e.g., 121, 145, 165, 183, 189 and 206). VEGF165, the predominant
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
125
isoform, is a 45-kDa homodimeric glycoprotein existing both free in the cytoplasm and bound through a heparin-binding domain to the cell surface and
extracellular matrix and is the isoform principally responsible for mediating the
pathological effects of VEGF in ocular neovascular diseases [23, 24]. VEGF189
and VEGF208 also contain this heparin-binding domain and are strongly basic,
and for the most part, they are sequestered in the extracellular matrix while
VEGF121 is acidic, lacks the heparin-binding domain and is secreted [25].
VEGF is a ligand for 2 receptor tyrosine kinases, VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2,
mediating their activation of downstream signal transduction cascades [18].
While VEGFR-2 is believed to be the principal receptor for VEGF signaling in
angiogenesis [18], VEGFR-1 also plays a key role in pathological ocular neovascularization through mediating monocyte chemotaxis to VEGF [24, 26].
Much research effort has been applied toward understanding the function of
VEGF with the goal of inhibiting, if not reversing, pathological angiogenesis.
However, it is becoming increasingly evident that VEGF is a pluripotent growth
factor that is active not only in angiogenesis but also in a variety of physiological
contexts. For example, there is recent evidence that VEGF serves as a neurotrophic
role, lending hope that the administration of VEGF may have benefits in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases and optic neuropathies [27, 28]. In the eye,
VEGF121 appears to be sufficient to exert this neuroprotective action, which may
serve to counteract the effects of retinal ischemia [29]. In addition, VEGF secretion
by the retinal pigment epithelium has been implicated in trophic maintenance of the
choriocapillaris [30], much like the trophic role it plays in other vascular beds [31].
VEGF also has been implicated in a variety of other vital and required physiological processes, including bone growth [32, 33], wound healing [34, 35],
female reproductive cycling [32, 36], vasorelaxation [37], skeletal muscle regeneration [38], glomerulogenesis [39] and protection of hepatic cells [40]. Given
this wide range of actions, antiangiogenic therapies that target VEGF need vigorous monitoring of safety, an issue of particular relevance for systemic administration [41]. In this context, there is already evidence that intravenous administration
of a monoclonal antibody that binds all VEGF isoforms is associated with an
increased incidence of hypertension, thromboembolism and hemorrhage [42– 47].
VEGF in Physiological and Pathological Angiogenesis
VEGF has a variety of properties in physiological and pathological neovascularization (table 2) [14, 18, 19, 23, 24, 26, 48–55]. In addition to its role as
a potent endothelial cell mitogen, VEGF serves as an endothelial cell survival
factor [56] and as a chemoattractant for bone marrow-derived endothelial cells
[48, 57, 58]. It also induces the synthesis of several enzymes whose actions
affect angiogenesis, including the matrix metalloproteinases and plasminogen
activator; together, these promote degradation of the extracellular matrix,
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
126
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 2. Key properties of VEGF in physiological and
pathological angiogenesis [14, 18, 19, 23, 24, 26, 48–55]
Endothelial cell mitogen
Endothelial cell survival factor
Chemoattractant for bone marrow-derived endothelial cells
Potent enhancer of vascular permeability
Expression induced by hypoxia
Chemoattractant for monocyte lineage cells
Proinflammatory cytokine, promoting leukocyte adhesion
Inducer of synthesis of key enzymes
Matrix metalloproteinases
Plasminogen activator
Endothelial nitric oxide synthase
permitting blood vessel extravasation [49–51]. VEGF also induces endothelial
nitric oxide synthase, leading to the upregulation of nitric oxide, a stimulator of
angiogenesis [52, 53]. In addition, VEGF acts as a chemoattractant for monocyte
lineage cells, which are believed to contribute to pathological ocular neovascularization [23, 24], and to promote local adhesion of leukocytes [14, 54].
Historically, much of the impetus for the isolation of angiogenic factors
stems from the hypothesis that antiangiogenic approaches could serve to starve
malignant tumors [59]. VEGF was evaluated in this context in the early 1990s
when it was found that tumor vascularization and growth could indeed be inhibited by injections of a monoclonal antibody to VEGF [60]. Subsequently, the
role of VEGF in supporting tumor growth was intensively examined, with the
first anti-VEGF agent developed for clinical use (bevacizumab, an anti-VEGF
monoclonal antibody) as an anticancer therapeutic [61]. VEGF has been implicated in several other classes of disorders involving dysregulation of angiogenesis, including hematological malignancies, inflammation, brain edema and
several pathological conditions of the female reproductive tract [18].
In the course of evaluating the properties of VEGF, 2 were recognized that
are of particular relevance to the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy. First,
synthesis of VEGF is upregulated by hypoxia, which provides a mechanistic
basis for VEGF-mediated ocular neovascularization in response to ischemia
[18]. Secondly, VEGF is the most potent known inducer of vascular permeability, 50,000 times more potent than histamine [55]. Several additional mechanisms contributing to VEGF-mediated increases in vascular permeability have
been elucidated, including induction of fenestrations in the endothelium [62],
dissolution of tight junctions [63] and induction of leukostasis and subsequent
injury to the endothelium [54, 64]. These properties of VEGF support a direct
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
127
involvement of VEGF in the macular edema that often accompanies diabetic
retinopathy.
VEGF in Ocular Neovascularization
An extensive series of clinical and preclinical investigations has confirmed
that VEGF plays a central role in promoting ocular neovascularization
[7, 65–73]. Clinical studies have demonstrated elevated ocular levels of VEGF
in patients with anterior segment neovascularization [7], retinal vein occlusion
[7], neovascular glaucoma [74], retinopathy of prematurity [75], and DME
[76 –78]. In other studies, increased expression of VEGF was detected within
the macula of patients with age-related macular degeneration when compared
with controls [79] and in choroidal neovascular membranes from patients with
either age-related macular degeneration or diabetic retinopathy [80–82].
Preclinical studies examining VEGF in a variety of animal models of ocular neovascularization demonstrated that increased intraocular levels of VEGF
can induce ocular neovascularization and that inactivation of VEGF in the eye
can prevent the occurrence of ocular neovascularization [67–73, 83–90].
In one of the first of these preclinical studies, Miller et al. [83] reported
that experimentally induced retinal vein occlusion in monkeys resulted in iris
neovascularization and an associated increase in ocular VEGF levels. The
severity of iris neovascularization was proportional to the concentration of
VEGF [83]. In other studies, injection of VEGF into the vitreous of monkeys
produced many of the features characteristic of diabetic retinopathy, including
intraretinal and preretinal neovascularization, microaneurysm formation,
intraretinal hemorrhage and edema, and areas of capillary nonperfusion with
endothelial cell hyperplasia [72, 84]. Qualitatively similar data were obtained
using molecular biological techniques. Injection of recombinant adenovirus
vectors expressing VEGF into rodent eyes increased VEGF production in the
retinal pigment epithelium, with resulting choroidal neovascularization
[85, 86]. The severity and extent of vascular proliferation correlated with the
amount of virus delivered [86]. Similarly, ocular neovascularization occurred in
transgenic mice engineered to overexpress VEGF in the retinal pigment epithelium [73] or in photoreceptors [87]. In the latter study, neovascularization was
sufficient in some instances to cause retinal detachment [87].
A variety of models have also been employed to demonstrate that blockade
of VEGF and its receptors can inhibit the development of ocular neovascularization. Injection of anti-VEGF antibodies was shown to prevent the neovascularization of the monkey iris that normally followed laser occlusion of the
retinal vein [68], and antibodies or their Fab fragments were also effective in
preventing choroidal neovascularization in a photocoagulation-induced model
in monkeys [70] and in a rat corneal wound model [67]. Other approaches for
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
128
dramroo@Yahoo.com
inactivating VEGF that have prevented ocular neovascularization included
administration of soluble VEGFR chimeric proteins by injection [69, 88] or
expression from an adenovirus vector [89], injection of pegaptanib [14], and
injection of an anti-VEGF antisense oligonucleotide [90].
VEGF in Diabetic Retinopathy
While the pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy involves a complex
interaction between many factors, current evidence supports a pivotal role of
VEGF. Progression of diabetic retinopathy begins with alterations in the retinal
vasculature characterized by the degeneration of retinal capillary pericytes,
thickening of the basement membrane, and adhesion of leukocytes to the
endothelium. These changes are accompanied by blockages of retinal capillaries, loss of endothelial cells, and the formation of acellular vessels, resulting in
areas of local nonperfusion [4, 91]. The resultant hypoxia leads to local
upregulation of factors such as VEGF [92]. Many retinal cell types express
VEGF, including all classes of neurons, glia, endothelial cells, pericytes, and
retinal pigment epithelium cells [30, 93, 94]. Hypoxia leads to dramatic
increases in VEGF expression from these cells [30, 93, 95].
Several biochemical pathways are believed to be important in linking
hyperglycemia to vascular injury in the retina, including the accumulation of
polyols, advanced glycation end products and reactive oxygen intermediates;
these compounds can produce vascular injury by affecting cellular metabolites
and by induction of growth factors [4, 96]. Both advanced glycation end products [97] and reactive oxygen intermediates [98] can directly induce VEGF
expression. While causative mechanisms remain to be fully elucidated,
increased VEGF levels have been consistently observed in eyes with diabetic
retinopathy [7, 65, 66, 99–101]. Early studies demonstrated that VEGF levels
were higher in eyes with proliferative diabetic retinopathy than those with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy; this finding has since been corroborated by
other investigators [99–101].
Several other factors were subsequently shown to be elevated in conjunction with VEGF in diabetic retinopathy, including interleukin (IL)-6 [100],
stromal-derived factor 1 [101] and angiopoietin II [102]. Similarly, elevated
levels of VEGF, together with angiotensin II [76], IL-6 [77], stromal-derived
factor 1 [101], and intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1 [78], have also
been demonstrated in association with DME. In recent work, both VEGF and
erythropoietin levels were found to be independent predictors of proliferative
diabetic retinopathy [103]. To what extent these various factors act independently of VEGF production is unclear; both angiotensin II [104, 105] and
stromal-derived factor 1 [106] induce VEGF production while ICAM-1 is
upregulated in response to VEGF [24, 107].
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
129
Normalized VEGF mRNA
(arbitrary units, mean)
40
p⬍ 0.0001
30
20
VEGF120
VEGF164
VEGF188
10
0
Control
(n ⫽ 5)
Diabetes
(n⫽ 6)
Fig. 1. Retinal VEGF mRNA levels are increased in early diabetes. Adapted from
Qaum et al. [108].
More recent evidence suggests that the proinflammatory effects of VEGF
are important in the pathogenesis of ocular neovascular diseases such as diabetic retinopathy. Specifically, VEGF-mediated upregulation of ICAM-1, an
adhesion receptor for leukocytes, may provide a link connecting some of the
vascular changes seen in diabetic retinopathy to elevated VEGF levels. This
conclusion is based on 2 lines of evidence. First, studies demonstrated that
expression of both retinal VEGF mRNA [108] and ICAM-1 [109] was upregulated in rodent models of diabetic retinopathy. Second, studies in nondiabetic
rats found that retinal ICAM-1 was upregulated in response to VEGF [24, 54].
Subsequently to its upregulation, ICAM-1 may then contribute to the vascular
damage characteristic of diabetic retinopathy by promoting leukocyte entrapment (leukostasis) in capillaries, with accompanying local nonperfusion, vascular leakage and endothelial cell damage.
Importantly, VEGF165 has been established as the predominant pathological isoform responsible for inflammation and vascular injury characteristic of
diabetic retinopathy as well as the ocular neovascularization that follows
ischemia [14, 23, 108]. In rats made diabetic by injection of streptozotocin, retinal VEGF levels were increased 3.2-fold after 1 week (fig. 1) [108]. The effects
of this elevation may have been compounded by the enhanced pathogenicity of
VEGF164; VEGF164 has been shown to be approximately twice as potent as VEGF120
(the rodent counterpart of human VEGF121) in mediating the upregulation of
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
130
dramroo@Yahoo.com
ICAM-1 and in producing leukocyte adhesion and blood-retinal barrier breakdown in a diabetic retinopathy model [14]. Moreover, leukocyte adhesion and
breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier were significantly suppressed in both
early and late diabetes by intravitreous injection of pegaptanib, which specifically targets VEGF165/164 [14]. Although suppression of blood-retinal barrier
breakdown was somewhat diminished in established diabetes, these results suggest that pegaptanib has the potential to reverse many of the features of diabetic
retinopathy.
Ishida et al. [23] have provided further evidence of the inflammatory role
of VEGF165 in hypoxia-related ocular neovascularization, which may also have
relevance to diabetic retinopathy. Using a mouse model system approximating
retinopathy of prematurity, VEGF164 was dramatically increased, compared with
VEGF120, in retinas undergoing pathological neovascularization. Injection of a
VEGFR-Fc fusion protein that provides a pan-isoform blockade inhibited both
physiological and pathological neovascularization, while pegaptanib inhibited
only the pathological form [23]. Since pegaptanib is specific to VEGF164/165,
this finding suggested that VEGF164/165 is especially important in mediating
pathologic neovascularization yet is dispensable for normal physiological vascularization in the eye. Studies in transgenic mice lacking VEGF164 yielded
similar results in that VEGF164-deficient mice exhibited no negative effects
with respect to physiological vascularization [23]. VEGF164 has also been found
to be dispensable for VEGF-mediated neuroprotective effects in the rat eye,
providing further evidence that the actions of VEGF164/165 can be inactivated
without producing adverse ocular effects [29].
These data support a proinflammatory role of VEGF165 in pathological
neovascularization and suggest that pegaptanib, by targeting only the VEGF165
isoform, could be both an effective and safe treatment for ocular neovascular
diseases, findings that have been confirmed in clinical trials of pegaptanib in
the treatment of age-related macular degeneration and DME [16].
Development of the Anti-VEGF Aptamer Pegaptanib
Pegaptanib is a nuclease-resistant, 28-nucleotide RNA aptamer that binds
to VEGF165 with high affinity (with a dissociation constant of approximately
0.2 nM) while showing little affinity for VEGF121 [110]. It is highly stable in
biological fluids due to chemical modifications designed to increase resistance
to nucleases and has also been modified by addition of a 40-kDa polyethylene
glycol moiety to the 5⬘ terminus to increase bioavailability by decreasing clearance from the vitreous [data on file, (OSI) Eyetech, Inc.; 110 –112]. Pegaptanib
is a potent inhibitor of the interaction between VEGF165 and its cellular receptors,
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
131
with the concentration for 50% inhibition of 125I-labeled VEGF (10 ng/ml)
binding to cultured human endothelial cells ranging from 0.75 to 1.4 nM; total
inhibition of VEGF binding occurs at 10 nM [15].
Perhaps the finding most relevant to diabetic retinopathy is that pegaptanib
is able to inhibit VEGF-mediated endothelial cell mitogenic and vascular permeability effects. Specifically, cultured endothelial cell proliferative responses
to VEGF165, but not to VEGF121, were inhibited when cells were pretreated with
pegaptanib [15]. In addition, vessel leakage produced in response to VEGF
(as demonstrated using an animal microvascular permeability assay) was inhibited by 83% when VEGF was preincubated with 0.1 ␮M pegaptanib [110].
These findings were further supported by studies demonstrating that intravitreous injection of pegaptanib significantly reduced ocular neovascularization
using rodent models of corneal angiogenesis and retinopathy of prematurity
[113].
Studies in rhesus monkeys demonstrated that the pharmacokinetic properties of pegaptanib were appropriate for a therapeutic agent, with elimination
half-lives following intravenous or subcutaneous injections of 9.3 and 12.0 h,
respectively [114]. Additional work in monkeys established that pegaptanib was
removed from the eye following intravitreous injection through plasma clearance, with a half-life of approximately 94 h [111]. Pegaptanib was detectable in
the eye for 28 days after a single 0.5-mg intravitreous injection and retained full
biological activity [111].
Such preclinical studies led to early phase I/II clinical trials testing the
safety of pegaptanib when administered by intravitreous injection to patients
with age-related macular degeneration [113, 115]. The efficacy of pegaptanib
in treating age-related macular degeneration was demonstrated in 2 concurrent
phase III trials, the VISION trials, involving a total of 1,208 patients [16].
Pegaptanib (0.3, 1 or 3 mg) or sham injections were administered intravitreously every 6 weeks for a period of 48 weeks. In a combined analysis, 70% (206/
294) of patients receiving 0.3 mg of pegaptanib (p ⬍ 0.001), 71% (213/300)
receiving 1 mg (p ⬍ 0.001) and 65% (193/296) receiving 3 mg (p ⫽ 0.03) lost
⬍15 letters of VA on the study eye chart between baseline and week 54, compared with 55% (164/296) of patients receiving sham injections (primary efficacy endpoint). There was no evidence of a dose-response relationship. The
0.3-mg pegaptanib dose also showed significant benefits for additional secondary endpoints (table 3) [16], including mean change in VA (fig. 2), VA loss
of 30 letters or more, and the likelihood of maintaining or gaining VA.
Pegaptanib demonstrated clinical benefits irrespective of angiographic subtype,
size of lesion, baseline VA, sex, age, race or iris pigmentation [16, 116]. Early
detection and treatment with pegaptanib appeared to result in superior vision
outcomes [117].
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
132
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 3. Maintenance, gain and severe loss of VA with pegaptanib and sham injection [16]
Endpoints
Pegaptanib 0.3 mg
(n ⫽ 294)
Sham
(n ⫽ 296)
Loss of ⬍15 letters
p value versus sham injection
Maintenance or gain of ⱖ0 letters
p value versus sham injection
Gain of ⱖ5 letters
p value versus sham injection
Gain of ⱖ10 letters
p value versus sham injection
Gain of ⱖ15 letters
p value versus sham injection
Loss of ⱖ30 letters
p value versus sham injection
206 (70)
⬍0.001
98 (33)
0.003
64 (22)
0.004
33 (11)
0.02
18 (6)
0.04
28 (10)
⬍0.001
164 (55)
67 (23)
36 (12)
17 (6)
6 (2)
65 (22)
Data are indicated as number of patients, with figures in parentheses as percentages.
Where data were missing, the last-observation-carried-forward method was used. Loss of 30
or more letters was defined as severe loss of VA.
p values were calculated with the use of the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test.
Mean change in vision (letters)
0
Pegaptanib sodium 0.3 mg (n⫽294)
Sham (n ⫽296)
⫺2
⫺4
⫺6
⫺8
⫺10
⫺12
p ⬍0.05 at all prespecified endpoints
(weeks 6, 12 and 54)
⫺14
⫺16
0
6
12
18
24
30
36
42
48
54
Time (weeks)
Fig. 2. Mean change in VA at week 54 in patients receiving 0.3 mg of pegaptanib or
sham injection in the pivotal phase III VISION trials. With permission from Ng and Adamis
[116].
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
133
The VISION trials established that pegaptanib was well tolerated with a
low risk of serious complications, such as endophthalmitis, retinal detachment
or traumatic lens injury [16]. These complications were related to the intravitreous injection procedure itself (and therefore modifiable) rather than to the drug.
An important safety finding is that there was no evidence that pegaptanib was
associated with major systemic adverse events, such as hypertension, thromboembolism or serious hemorrhage, that have been reported with systemically
administered, pan-isoform VEGF blockade [42, 44–47]. The positive findings
of the VISION trials led to US Food and Drug Administration approval of
pegaptanib for the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration.
This was a notable milestone in that pegaptanib represented the first aptamer
therapeutic approved by a government regulatory agency and the first antiVEGF agent for treatment of an ocular neovascular disease.
Phase II Trial of Pegaptanib in Patients with DME
The accumulating body of evidence supporting an important role of
VEGF165 in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy (see above), coupled with
the preclinical findings demonstrating that pegaptanib was able to suppress
leukostasis and blood-retinal barrier breakdown in established diabetes [14],
provided strong theoretical support for evaluating pegaptanib as a therapeutic
agent for DME. Intravitreous pegaptanib was evaluated in a phase I study,
which identified no safety issues that would preclude the use of pegaptanib in
patients with DME [data on file, (OSI) Eyetech, Inc.]. A phase II trial was conducted to further explore the safety and efficacy of pegaptanib in patients with
DME [17]. The design and important outcomes of the phase II trial are
described below.
Study Design
The randomized, sham-controlled, double-masked, dose-finding phase II
trial enrolled patients of 18 years and older with type 1 or type 2 diabetes [17].
To be eligible, study eyes had to have macular edema involving the center of the
macula, as confirmed by optical coherence tomography (OCT), together with
leakage from microaneurysms, retinal telangiectasis, or both, demonstrable on
fluorescein angiography, and retinal thickening of at least half a disc area involving the central macula. An independent fundus photograph and angiogram
reading center confirmed eligibility and appropriate retinal thickness classification (both for study entry and subsequent randomization and stratification)
according to baseline fluorescein angiography and OCT assessments. Only
patients for whom the investigator judged that photocoagulation could be safely
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
134
dramroo@Yahoo.com
withheld for 16 weeks could be enrolled. A best-corrected VA in the study eye
from 20/50 to 20/320 and at least 20/100 in the fellow eye were required.
Principal exclusion criteria included a history of panretinal, focal photocoagulation, other retinal treatments within the previous 6 months, or abnormalities
that would interfere with measurements of VA and fundus photography. Patients
with glycosylated hemoglobin levels ⱖ13%, with evidence of severe cardiac
disease, clinically significant peripheral vascular disease, or uncontrolled
hypertension were excluded.
In all, 172 patients were randomized to 4 treatment arms (0.3, 1 and 3 mg
pegaptanib or sham injections). Randomization was stratified by study site, size
of the thickened retina area (ⱕ2.5 vs. ⬎2.5 disc areas) and baseline VA (letter
score ⱖ58 vs. ⬍58). Injections were given at baseline, week 6 and week 12 for a
minimum of 3 injections. Thereafter, additional injections were given every
6 weeks up to week 30 (for a maximum of 6 injections) at the discretion of the
investigators. Final assessments were made at week 36 or 6 weeks after the last
injection. Refraction, VA, an ophthalmologic examination and OCT were performed at baseline and at each visit. Color fundus photography was performed at
baseline and every 6 weeks while fluorescein angiography was carried out at
baseline and 6 weeks after the last injection. Overall, 169 patients received at least
1 injection, and more than 90% of patients in each treatment group completed
the study; among the pegaptanib-treated patients, 49% received the maximum of
6 injections from baseline to week 30 (table 4) [17].
Results
Visual Outcomes. Visual outcomes were evaluated in terms of a mean change
in best-corrected VA (number of lines and letters gained or lost) and the proportion of patients maintaining baseline VA (0 lines lost) or gaining ⱖ5 (1 line), ⱖ10
(2 lines) or ⱖ15 letters (3 lines). At week 36, all pegaptanib groups demonstrated
better VA relative to the sham group. Compared with baseline, 93, 98, 93 and
90% of patients in the 0.3-, 1-, 3-mg and sham groups, respectively, avoided losing 3 or more lines of VA. In the same treatment groups, gains of ⱖ0 letters were
seen in 73, 72, 60 and 51% (0.3 mg vs. sham; p ⫽ 0.023), gains of ⱖ5 letters were
seen in 59, 44, 31 and 34% (0.3 mg vs. sham; p ⫽ 0.010), gains of ⱖ10
letters were seen in 34, 30, 14 and 10% (0.3 mg vs. sham; p ⫽ 0.003), and gains
of ⱖ15 letters were seen in 18, 14, 7 and 7% (0.3 mg vs. sham; p ⫽ 0.012). In
these same respective groups, mean changes in VA also favored pegaptanib treatment, with changes of ⫹4.7, ⫹4.7, ⫹1.1 and –0.4 letters (p ⫽ 0.04, 0.05 and 0.55
for the 0.3-, 1- and 3-mg groups compared with the sham group) (table 5) [17].
Moreover, more patients in all the pegaptanib groups maintained or gained acuity,
with a 22% absolute increase and a 43% relative increase in the 0.3-mg group
compared with the sham group (fig. 3) [17].
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
135
Table 4. Treatment summary (safety population, n ⫽ 169)
Pegaptanib
Sham
0.3 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
1 mg
(n ⫽ 42)
3 mg
(n ⫽ 42)
(n ⫽ 41)
Injections received, day 0 to week 30
Mean ⫾ SD
Median
Range
5.0 ⫾ 1.2
5.0
1–6
5.2 ⫾ 1.0
6.0
3–6
5.0 ⫾ 1.3
6.0
1–6
4.5⫾ 1.5
5.0
1–6
Number of patients receiving
6 injections
5 injections
4 injections
3 injections
2 injections
1 injection
0 injection
21 (48)
11 (25)
5 (11)
6 (14)
0
1 (2)
0
24 (57)
8 (19)
6 (14)
4 (10)
0
0
0
23 (55)
7 (17)
5 (12)
6 (14)
0
1 (2)
0
15 (37)
8 (20)
6 (15)
8 (20)
3 (7)
1 (2)
0
Figures in parentheses are percentages.
With permission from the Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17].
Table 5. Changes from baseline to week 36 in VA (intention-to-treat population, n ⫽ 172)
Pegaptanib
Mean change in VA from baseline, letters
Week 0
Week 6
Week 12
Week 30
Week 36
p value versus sham at week 361
Sham
0.3 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
1 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
3 mg
(n ⫽ 42)
⫹0.4
⫹1.8
⫹3.5
⫹5.4
⫹4.7
0.04
–0.0
⫹2.9
⫹4.3
⫹4.1
⫹4.7
0.05
⫹0.2
⫹3.6
⫹2.5
⫹2.3
⫹1.1
0.55
(n ⫽ 42)
⫹0.9
⫹1.4
⫹1.3
⫹0.6
–0.4
For missing baseline data, day 0 data were used for the analysis. For missing data at subsequent time
points, the last observation was carried forward. There were missing relevant data for 1 patient each in the
1-mg and sham groups.
1
The analysis of covariance model was adjusted for the baseline retinal thickening area and baseline
vision; p values of pairwise comparisons were unadjusted for multiplicity.
With permission from the Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17].
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
136
dramroo@Yahoo.com
100
90
Pegaptanib 0.3mg (n ⫽44)
Pegaptanib 1mg (n ⫽44)
Pegaptanib 3mg (n ⫽44)
Sham (n⫽42)
80
Patients (%)
70
* *
*
60
50
40
**
*
30
20
10
0
ⱖ0 lines
ⱖ1 line
ⱖ2 lines
ⱖ3 lines
Gained
Fig. 3. Percentage of patients treated with pegaptanib maintaining or gaining VA from
baseline to week 36 (intention-to-treat population, n ⫽ 172). *p ⬍ 0.05; **p ⬍ 0.01. With
permission from the Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17].
Retinal Thickness. Changes in central retinal thickness were evaluated as
an anatomic proxy for the presence and extent of macular edema. Mean
changes in retinal thickness from baseline to week 36 as determined at the center point were –68.0, –22.7 and –5.3 ␮m for the 0.3-, 1- and 3-mg groups,
respectively, compared with ⫹3.7 ␮m for the sham group (0.3 mg vs. sham;
p ⫽ 0.021). More patients in the pegaptanib-treated groups experienced an
absolute decrease of ⱖ75, ⱖ100 and ⱖ200 ␮m compared with the sham group.
Differences in the 0.3-mg group were especially marked, with 49% showing a
decrease of ⱖ75 ␮m compared with 19% in the sham group (p ⫽ 0.008); in
addition, 42% of the 0.3-mg pegaptanib group had an decrease of ⱖ100 ␮m
compared with 16% in the sham arm (p ⫽ 0.02) (table 6) [17]. Baseline and
week 36 color fundus photographs and OCT images from a representative
patient are presented in figure 4 [17].
Need for Laser Photocoagulation. In the sham group, 48% of patients
required additional intervention with photocoagulation therapy between weeks
12 and 36 while only 25, 30 and 40% of patients in the 0.3-, 1- and 3-mg groups
needed such treatment (p ⫽ 0.042, 0.090 and 0.537, respectively, compared
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
137
Table 6. Changes from baseline to week 36 in retinal thickness of the center point of the central subfield (intention-to-treat population, n ⫽ 172)
Pegaptanib
Sham
0.3 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
1 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
3 mg
(n ⫽ 42)
Retinal thickness, microns
Mean at baseline
Mean change at week 36
95% confidence interval
p value versus sham1
476.0
–68.0
–118.9 to –9.88
0.02
451.7
–22.7
–76.9 to 33.8
0.44
424.7
–5.3
–63.0 to 49.5
0.81
423.2
⫹3.7
ⱖ75 ␮m decrease from baseline
At week 36
Odds ratio
95% confidence interval
p value versus sham2
21 (49)
4.1
1.5–11.3
0.008
11 (28)
1.7
0.6–5.0
0.283
9 (25)
1.4
0.5–4.4
0.596
7 (19)
ⱖ100 ␮m decrease from baseline
At week 36
Odds ratio
95% confidence interval
p value versus sham2
18 (42)
3.7
1.3–10.8
0.021
10 (26)
1.8
0.6–5.5
0.303
7 (19)
1.3
0.4–4.2
0.829
6 (16)
ⱖ200 ␮m decrease from baseline
At week 36
Odds ratio
95% confidence interval
p value versus sham2
5 (12)
4.7
0.5–42.5
0.126
3 (8)
3.0
0.3–30.2
0.304
2 (6)
2.1
0.2–24.4
0.678
1 (3)
(n ⫽ 42)
Figures in parentheses are percentages. For missing baseline data, day 0 data were used for the analysis.
For missing data at week 36, the last observation was carried forward. There are missing relevant data for
1 patient in the 0.3-mg, 5 patients in the 1-mg, 6 patients in the 3-mg and 5 patients in the sham groups.
1
Analysis of covariance model adjusted for the baseline retinal thickening area, baseline vision, and
baseline retinal thickness; p value indicates the difference in least square means between each dose group
and the sham group.
2
The Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test was adjusted for the baseline retinal thickening area and baseline
vision; p value indicates the difference in odds ratios between each dose group and the sham group.
With permission from the Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17].
with sham). For the 0.3-mg group, this difference meant a relative decrease of
44% compared with the sham group (table 7) [17].
Retinal Neovascularization. Fundus photographs of all study patients
were graded for severity of diabetic retinopathy by an independent reading
center at baseline, week 36 and week 52 using the Early Treatment Diabetic
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
138
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
c
d
Fig. 4. a, b Baseline color fundus photograph (a) and optical coherence tomography
image (b) before treatment with intravitreous pegaptanib 0.3 mg show intraretinal hemorrhage, microaneurysm formation and exudates as well as a retinal thickness of 422 ␮M with
cystic spaces evident at the center of the macula. VA at the time of study entry was 68 Early
Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study chart letters (Snellen acuity, approximately 20/50).
Laser photocoagulation was administered 6 months before enrollment. Adapted from the
Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17]. c, d Fundus photograph at week 36 (c) and
optical coherence tomography image (d) after 4 intravitreous injections (at day 0, weeks 6, 12
and 24) of pegaptanib 0.3 mg show partial resolution of retinal microaneurysms, hemorrhages and exudates, as well as a marked decrease in retinal thickness to 267 ␮M. VA at week
36 was 79 Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study chart letters (Snellen acuity, approximately 20/25). No focal laser photocoagulation treatments were administered after enrollment. Adapted from the Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17].
Retinopathy Study severity scale; fluorescein angiograms were also graded in a
masked fashion for the presence of neovascularization. A review of all subjects
identified 19 of 172 patients who had retinal neovascularization (⬍0.5 disc area
in one or more fields) in the study eye at baseline [118]. A retrospective analysis
of these patients was done to evaluate the effects of pegaptanib on retinal neovascularization. One of the 19 patients was excluded due to a protocol violation
(scatter photocoagulation 13 days before randomization), and 2 were excluded
due to the unavailability of follow-up photographs. Of the remaining cohort of
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
139
Table 7. Patients receiving focal/grid laser at week 12 or later in the study eye
(intention-to-treat population, n ⫽ 172)
Pegaptanib
Sham
0.3 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
1 mg
(n ⫽ 44)
3 mg
(n ⫽ 42)
(n ⫽ 42)
Focal photocoagulation
Yes
No
11 (25)
33 (75)
13 (30)
31 (70)
17 (40)
25 (60)
20 (48)
22 (52)
Comparison versus sham
Odds ratio
95% confidence interval
p value
0.37
0.15–0.91
0.042
0.46
0.19–1.12
0.090
0.75
0.32–1.77
0.537
Figures in parentheses are percentages. p values based on the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel
test were adjusted for the baseline retinal thickening area and baseline vision.
With permission from the Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group [17].
16 patients included in this analysis, 8 had photocoagulation more than
6 months prior to the study and 1 had photocoagulation during the study. Four
patients had retinal neovascularization in the fellow eye [118].
Thirteen of these patients received pegaptanib, while the remaining
3 patients received sham injections. Eight of 13 patients (61%) in the pegaptanib
group, including the patient receiving photocoagulation during follow-up, had
regression of neovascularization demonstrated by fundus photography, diminished or absent fluorescein leakage on fluorescein angiography, or both at 36
weeks. In contrast, none of the 3 patients in the sham group and none of the 4 fellow
eyes showed regression of neovascularization. Moreover, 3 of the 8 patients
(including the patient receiving photocoagulation) who had regression of
neovascularization while receiving pegaptanib experienced a return of neovascularization between weeks 36 and 52, when pegaptanib had been discontinued
(fig. 5) [118]. These findings provide further support that VEGF165 plays an
important role in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy and suggest that early
treatment, before the most destructive sequelae caused by neovascularization
have occurred, is likely to be beneficial.
Safety. Pegaptanib was well tolerated, with the majority of adverse events
being transient, injection procedure related and mild to moderate in severity.
Few serious adverse events were noted, and none were attributed to the pegaptanib drug itself. There was one incident of endophthalmitis (culture negative)
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
140
dramroo@Yahoo.com
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
Fig. 5. a–d Baseline visit: magnification of retinal neovascularization elsewhere (a),
red-free photograph showing the location of the neovascularization along the inferotemporal
arcade (b), fluorescein angiograms with areas of capillary nonperfusion in the early phase
(c), and leakage from the neovascularization elsewhere in the late-phase frame (d). e–h
Thirty-six weeks after 6 periodic pegaptanib injections (and 6 weeks since most recent
injection): regression of neovascularization elsewhere on red-free photographs (e, f ), with
less apparent microaneurysms in the early-phase frame ( g) and regression of leakage from
neovascularization elsewhere in the late phase (h). i–l Fifty-two weeks after study entry and
22 weeks since the last pegaptanib injection: reappearance of neovascularization elsewhere
on red-free photographs (i, j), with reappearance of leakage from neovascularization elsewhere in the early- (k) and late-phase (l) frames. With permission from Macugen Diabetic
Retinopathy Study Group [118].
after intravitreous injection among 652 injections (0.15%) administered in the
pegaptanib arms, and there was no evidence of cataract formation/progression,
sustained intraocular pressure elevation, or serious systemic events associated
with pegaptanib therapy. Importantly, there was no evidence that pegaptanib
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
141
treatment was associated with systemic thromboembolic events or the cardiac,
gastrointestinal or hemorrhagic complications noted with pan-VEGF blockade.
Conclusions
Current treatment options for diabetic retinopathy are primarily restricted
to laser photocoagulation and pars plana vitrectomy, both of which are destructive and do not address the underlying pathological mechanisms involved in the
development of diabetic retinopathy. Preclinical studies support the concept of
blocking the actions of VEGF165 in the eye as a sound therapeutic approach to
the treatment of diabetic retinopathy. These concepts have been validated by a
recent phase II study that demonstrated the clinical benefits of the VEGF165blocking aptamer, pegaptanib, in the treatment of DME. Outcomes included
improvements in VA and a reduction in retinal thickness. Moreover, a separate
retrospective analysis in a subset of these subjects who had concomitant retinal
neovascularization demonstrated regression of neovascularization in 61% of
eyes treated with pegaptanib. Confirmation of these findings and the more subtle effects of VEGF165 blockade upon the severity of underlying retinopathy, as
well as the effects upon capillary nonperfusion await the results of definitive
phase III trials that are under way.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Resnikoff S, Pascolini D, Etya’ale D, Kocur I, Pararajasegaram R, Pokharel GP, Mariotti SP:
Global data on visual impairment in the year 2002. Bull World Health Organ 2004;82:844–851.
Kempen JH, O’Colmain BJ, Leske MC, Haffner SM, Klein R, Moss SE, Taylor HR, Hamman RF:
The prevalence of diabetic retinopathy among adults in the United States. Arch Ophthalmol
2004;122:552–563.
Sullivan PW, Morrato EH, Ghushchyan V, Wyatt HR, Hill JO: Obesity, inactivity, and the prevalence of diabetes and diabetes-related cardiovascular comorbidities in the US, 2000–2002.
Diabetes Care 2005;28:1599–1603.
Caldwell RB, Bartoli M, Behzadian MA, El-Remessy AE, Al-Shabrawey M, Platt DH, Caldwell RW:
Vascular endothelial growth factor and diabetic retinopathy: pathophysiological mechanisms and
treatment perspectives. Diabetes Metab Res Rev 2003;19:442–455.
Aiello LM: Perspectives on diabetic retinopathy. Am J Ophthalmol 2003;136:122–135.
Ambati J, Ambati BK, Yoo SH, Ianchulev S, Adamis AP: Age-related macular degeneration: etiology, pathogenesis, and therapeutic strategies. Surv Ophthalmol 2003;48:257–293.
Aiello LP, Avery RL, Arrigg PG, Keyt BA, Jampel HD, Shah ST, Pasquale LR, Thieme H,
Iwamoto MA, Park JE, et al: Vascular endothelial growth factor in ocular fluid of patients with
diabetic retinopathy and other retinal disorders. N Engl J Med 1994;331:1480–1487.
Aiello LP, Gardner TW, King GL, Blankenship G, Cavallerano JD, Ferris FL 3rd, Klein R:
Diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes Care 1998;21:143–156.
Smiddy WE, Flynn HW Jr: Vitrectomy in the management of diabetic retinopathy. Surv
Ophthalmol 1999;43:491–507.
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
142
dramroo@Yahoo.com
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Grigorian R, Bhagat N, Lanzetta P, Tutela A, Zarbin M: Pars plana vitrectomy for refractory diabetic macular edema. Semin Ophthalmol 2003;18:116–120.
Yamamoto T, Hitani K, Tsukahara I, Yamamoto S, Kawasaki R, Yamashita H, Takeuchi S: Early
postoperative retinal thickness changes and complications after vitrectomy for diabetic macular
edema. Am J Ophthalmol 2003;135:14–19.
Stefansson E: The therapeutic effects of retinal laser treatment and vitrectomy. A theory based on
oxygen and vascular physiology. Acta Ophthalmol Scand 2001;79:435–440.
Photocoagulation for diabetic macular edema. Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study report
number 1. Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group. Arch Ophthalmol
1985;103:1796–1806.
Ishida S, Usui T, Yamashiro K, Kaji Y, Ahmed E, Carrasquillo KG, Amano S, Hida T, Oguchi Y,
Adamis AP: VEGF164 is proinflammatory in the diabetic retina. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
2003;44:2155–2162.
Bell C, Lynam E, Landfair DJ, Janjic N, Wiles ME: Oligonucleotide NX1838 inhibits VEGF165mediated cellular responses in vitro. In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim 1999;35:533–542.
Gragoudas ES, Adamis AP, Cunningham ET Jr, Feinsod M, Guyer DR: Pegaptanib for neovascular age-related macular degeneration. N Engl J Med 2004;351:2805–2816.
Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group: A phase II randomized double-masked trial of
pegaptanib, an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor aptamer, for diabetic macular edema.
Ophthalmology 2005;112:1748–1758.
Ferrara N: Vascular endothelial growth factor: basic science and clinical progress. Endocr Rev
2004;25:581–611.
Senger DR, Galli SJ, Dvorak AM, Perruzzi CA, Harvey VS, Dvorak HF: Tumor cells secrete a vascular permeability factor that promotes accumulation of ascites fluid. Science 1983;219:983–985.
Leung DW, Cachianes G, Kuang WJ, Goeddel DV, Ferrara N: Vascular endothelial growth factor is
a secreted angiogenic mitogen. Science 1989;246:1306–1309.
Angiogenesis Foundation: Understanding angiogenesis. http://www.angio.org (list of known
angiogenic growth factors).
Ferrara N, Davis-Smyth T: The biology of vascular endothelial growth factor. Endocr Rev
1997;18:4–25.
Ishida S, Usui T, Yamashiro K, Kaji Y, Amano S, Ogura Y, Hida T, Oguchi Y, Ambati J, Miller JW,
Gragoudas ES, Ng YS, D’Amore PA, Shima DT, Adamis AP: VEGF164-mediated inflammation is
required for pathological, but not physiological, ischemia-induced retinal neovascularization. J
Exp Med 2003;198:483–489.
Usui T, Ishida S, Yamashiro K, Kaji Y, Poulaki V, Moore J, McMullan T, Amano S, Horikawa Y,
Dartt D, Golding M, Shima D, Adamis A: VEGF164(165) as the pathological isoform: differential
leukocyte and endothelial responses through VEGFR1 and VEGFR2. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
2004;45:368–374.
Park JE, Keller GA, Ferrara N: The vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) isoforms: differential deposition into the subepithelial extracellular matrix and bioactivity of extracellular matrixbound VEGF. Mol Biol Cell 1993;4:1317–1326.
Barleon B, Sozzani S, Zhou D, Weich HA, Mantovani A, Marme D: Migration of human monocytes in response to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is mediated via the VEGF receptor flt-1. Blood 1996;87:3336–3343.
Storkebaum E, Lambrechts D, Carmeliet P: VEGF: once regarded as a specific angiogenic factor,
now implicated in neuroprotection. Bioessays 2004;26:943–954.
Storkebaum E, Lambrechts D, Dewerchin M, Moreno-Murciano MP, Appelmans S, Oh H,
Van Damme P, Rutten B, Man WY, De Mol M, Wyns S, Manka D, Vermeulen K, Van Den Bosch L,
Mertens N, Schmitz C, Robberecht W, Conway EM, Collen D, Moons L, Carmeliet P: Treatment
of motoneuron degeneration by intracerebroventricular delivery of VEGF in a rat model of ALS.
Nat Neurosci 2005;8:85–92.
Shima DT, Nishijima K, Jo N, Adamis AP: VEGF-mediated neuroprotection in ischemic retina
(abstract). Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45:3270.
Blaauwgeers HG, Holtkamp GM, Rutten H, Witmer AN, Koolwijk P, Partanen TA, Alitalo K,
Kroon ME, Kijlstra A, van Hinsbergh VW, Schlingemann RO: Polarized vascular endothelial
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
143
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
growth factor secretion by human retinal pigment epithelium and localization of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors on the inner choriocapillaris. Evidence for a trophic paracrine relation.
Am J Pathol 1999;155:421–428.
Baffert F, Thurston G, Rochon-Duck M, Le T, Brekken R, McDonald DM: Age-related changes in
vascular endothelial growth factor dependency and angiopoietin-1-induced plasticity of adult
blood vessels. Circ Res 2004;94:984–992.
Ryan AM, Eppler DB, Hagler KE, Bruner RH, Thomford PJ, Hall RL, Shopp GM, O’Neill CA:
Preclinical safety evaluation of rhuMAbVEGF, an antiangiogenic humanized monoclonal antibody. Toxicol Pathol 1999;27:78–86.
Gerber HP, Vu TH, Ryan AM, Kowalski J, Werb Z, Ferrara N: VEGF couples hypertrophic cartilage remodeling, ossification and angiogenesis during endochondral bone formation. Nat Med
1999;5:623–628.
Nissen NN, Polverini PJ, Koch AE, Volin MV, Gamelli RL, DiPietro LA: Vascular endothelial
growth factor mediates angiogenic activity during the proliferative phase of wound healing. Am J
Pathol 1998;152:1445–1452.
Deodato B, Arsic N, Zentilin L, Galeano M, Santoro D, Torre V, Altavilla D, Valdembri D,
Bussolino F, Squadrito F, Giacca M: Recombinant AAV vector encoding human VEGF165
enhances wound healing. Gene Ther 2002;9:777–785.
Fraser HM, Wilson H, Rudge JS, Wiegand SJ: Single injections of vascular endothelial growth
factor trap block ovulation in the macaque and produce a prolonged, dose-related suppression of
ovarian function. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2005;90:1114–1122.
Liu MH, Jin H, Floten HS, Ren Z, Yim AP, He GW: Vascular endothelial growth factor-mediated,
endothelium-dependent relaxation in human internal mammary artery. Ann Thorac Surg 2002;73:
819–824.
Arsic N, Zacchigna S, Zentilin L, Ramirez-Correa G, Pattarini L, Salvi A, Sinagra G, Giacca M:
Vascular endothelial growth factor stimulates skeletal muscle regeneration in vivo. Mol Ther
2004;10:844–854.
Kitamoto Y, Tokunaga H, Tomita K: Vascular endothelial growth factor is an essential molecule
for mouse kidney development: glomerulogenesis and nephrogenesis. J Clin Invest 1997;99:
2351–2357.
LeCouter J, Moritz DR, Li B, Phillips GL, Liang XH, Gerber HP, Hillan KJ, Ferrara N: Angiogenesisindependent endothelial protection of liver: role of VEGFR-1. Science 2003;299:890–893.
van Wijngaarden P, Coster DJ, Williams KA: Inhibitors of ocular neovascularization: promises and
potential problems. JAMA 2005;293:1509–1513.
Kabbinavar F, Hurwitz HI, Fehrenbacher L, Meropol NJ, Novotny WF, Lieberman G, Griffing S,
Bergsland E: Phase II, randomized trial comparing bevacizumab plus fluorouracil (FU)/leucovorin
(LV) with FU/LV alone in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. J Clin Oncol 2003;21:60–65.
Kabbinavar FF, Schulz J, McCleod M, Patel T, Hamm JT, Hecht JR, Mass R, Perrou B, Nelson B,
Novotny WF: Addition of bevacizumab to bolus fluorouracil and leucovorin in first-line metastatic
colorectal cancer: results of a randomized phase II trial. J Clin Oncol 2005;23:3697–3705.
Hurwitz H, Fehrenbacher L, Novotny W, Cartwright T, Hainsworth J, Heim W, Berlin J, Baron A,
Griffing S, Holmgren E, Ferrara N, Fyfe G, Rogers B, Ross R, Kabbinavar F: Bevacizumab plus
irinotecan, fluorouracil, and leucovorin for metastatic colorectal cancer. N Engl J Med 2004;350:
2335–2342.
Johnson DH, Fehrenbacher L, Novotny WF, Herbst RS, Nemunaitis JJ, Jablons DM, Langer CJ,
DeVore RF 3rd, Gaudreault J, Damico LA, Holmgren E, Kabbinavar F: Randomized phase II trial
comparing bevacizumab plus carboplatin and paclitaxel with carboplatin and paclitaxel alone in
previously untreated locally advanced or metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer. J Clin Oncol
2004;22:2184–2191.
Miller KD, Chap LI, Holmes FA, Cobleigh MA, Marcom PK, Fehrenbacher L, Dickler M,
Overmoyer BA, Reimann JD, Sing AP, Langmuir V, Rugo HS: Randomized phase III trial of
capecitabine compared with bevacizumab plus capecitabine in patients with previously treated
metastatic breast cancer. J Clin Oncol 2005;23:792–799.
Skillings JR, Johnson DH, Miller K, Kabbinavar F, Bergsland E, Holmgren E, Holden SN,
Hurwitz H, Scappaticci F: Arterial thromboembolic events (ATEs) in a pooled analysis of 5
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
144
dramroo@Yahoo.com
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) of bevacizumab (BV) with chemotherapy (meeting
abstracts). J Clin Oncol 2005;23:3019.
Csaky KG, Baffi JZ, Byrnes GA, Wolfe JD, Hilmer SC, Flippin J, Cousins SW: Recruitment of
marrow-derived endothelial cells to experimental choroidal neovascularization by local expression
of vascular endothelial growth factor. Exp Eye Res 2004;78:1107–1116.
Pepper MS, Ferrara N, Orci L, Montesano R: Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) induces
plasminogen activators and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 in microvascular endothelial cells.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1991;181:902–906.
Lamoreaux WJ, Fitzgerald ME, Reiner A, Hasty KA, Charles ST: Vascular endothelial growth factor increases release of gelatinase A and decreases release of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases
by microvascular endothelial cells in vitro. Microvasc Res 1998;55:29–42.
Hiratsuka S, Nakamura K, Iwai S, Murakami M, Itoh T, Kijima H, Shipley JM, Senior RM,
Shibuya M: MMP9 induction by vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1 is involved in lungspecific metastasis. Cancer Cell 2002;2:289–300.
Papapetropoulos A, Garcia-Cardena G, Madri JA, Sessa WC: Nitric oxide production contributes
to the angiogenic properties of vascular endothelial growth factor in human endothelial cells. J
Clin Invest 1997;100:3131–3139.
Uhlmann S, Friedrichs U, Eichler W, Hoffmann S, Wiedemann P: Direct measurement of
VEGF-induced nitric oxide production by choroidal endothelial cells. Microvasc Res 2001;62:
179–189.
Miyamoto K, Khosrof S, Bursell SE, Moromizato Y, Aiello LP, Ogura Y, Adamis AP: Vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-induced retinal vascular permeability is mediated by intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1). Am J Pathol 2000;156:1733–1739.
Senger DR, Connolly DT, Van de Water L, Feder J, Dvorak HF: Purification and NH2-terminal
amino acid sequence of guinea pig tumor-secreted vascular permeability factor. Cancer Res
1990;50:1774–1778.
Alon T, Hemo I, Itin A, Pe’er J, Stone J, Keshet E: Vascular endothelial growth factor acts as a survival factor for newly formed retinal vessels and has implications for retinopathy of prematurity.
Nat Med 1995;1:1024–1028.
Asahara T, Takahashi T, Masuda H, Kalka C, Chen D, Iwaguro H, Inai Y, Silver M, Isner JM:
VEGF contributes to postnatal neovascularization by mobilizing bone marrow-derived endothelial
progenitor cells. EMBO J 1999;18:3964–3972.
Lyden D, Hattori K, Dias S, Costa C, Blaikie P, Butros L, Chadburn A, Heissig B, Marks W,
Witte L, Wu Y, Hicklin D, Zhu Z, Hackett NR, Crystal RG, Moore MA, Hajjar KA, Manova K,
Benezra R, Rafii S: Impaired recruitment of bone-marrow-derived endothelial and hematopoietic
precursor cells blocks tumor angiogenesis and growth. Nat Med 2001;7:1194–1201.
Folkman J: Tumor angiogenesis: therapeutic implications. N Engl J Med 1971;285:1182–1186.
Kim KJ, Li B, Winer J, Armanini M, Gillett N, Phillips HS, Ferrara N: Inhibition of vascular
endothelial growth factor-induced angiogenesis suppresses tumour growth in vivo. Nature
1993;362:841–844.
Ferrara N, Hillan KJ, Gerber HP, Novotny W: Discovery and development of bevacizumab, an
anti-VEGF antibody for treating cancer. Nat Rev Drug Discov 2004;3:391–400.
Roberts WG, Palade GE: Increased microvascular permeability and endothelial fenestration
induced by vascular endothelial growth factor. J Cell Sci 1995;108:2369–2379.
Antonetti DA, Barber AJ, Hollinger LA, Wolpert EB, Gardner TW: Vascular endothelial growth
factor induces rapid phosphorylation of tight junction proteins occludin and zonula occluden 1.
A potential mechanism for vascular permeability in diabetic retinopathy and tumors. J Biol Chem
1999;274:23463–23467.
Joussen AM, Murata T, Tsujikawa A, Kirchhof B, Bursell SE, Adamis AP: Leukocyte-mediated
endothelial cell injury and death in the diabetic retina. Am J Pathol 2001;158:147–152.
Adamis AP, Miller JW, Bernal MT, D’Amico DJ, Folkman J, Yeo TK, Yeo KT: Increased vascular
endothelial growth factor levels in the vitreous of eyes with proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Am
J Ophthalmol 1994;118:445–450.
Malecaze F, Clamens S, Simorre-Pinatel V, Mathis A, Chollet P, Favard C, Bayard F, Plouet J:
Detection of vascular endothelial growth factor messenger RNA and vascular endothelial
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
145
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
growth factor-like activity in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Arch Ophthalmol 1994;112:
1476–1482.
Amano S, Rohan R, Kuroki M, Tolentino M, Adamis AP: Requirement for vascular endothelial
growth factor in wound- and inflammation-related corneal neovascularization. Invest Ophthalmol
Vis Sci 1998;39:18–22.
Adamis AP, Shima DT, Tolentino MJ, Gragoudas ES, Ferrara N, Folkman J, D’Amore PA, Miller JW:
Inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor prevents retinal ischemia-associated iris neovascularization in a nonhuman primate. Arch Ophthalmol 1996;114:66–71.
Aiello LP, Pierce EA, Foley ED, Takagi H, Chen H, Riddle L, Ferrara N, King G, Smith L:
Suppression of retinal neovascularization in vivo by inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) using soluble VEGF-receptor chimeric proteins. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1995;92:
10457–10461.
Krzystolik MG, Afshari MA, Adamis AP, Gaudreault J, Gragoudas ES, Michaud NA, Li W,
Connolly E, O’Neill CA, Miller JW: Prevention of experimental choroidal neovascularization
with intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor antibody fragment. Arch Ophthalmol
2002;120:338–346.
Tolentino MJ, Miller JW, Gragoudas ES, Chatzistefanou K, Ferrara N, Adamis AP: Vascular
endothelial growth factor is sufficient to produce iris neovascularization and neovascular glaucoma in a nonhuman primate. Arch Ophthalmol 1996;114:964–970.
Tolentino MJ, McLeod DS, Taomoto M, Otsuji T, Adamis AP, Lutty GA: Pathologic features of
vascular endothelial growth factor-induced retinopathy in the nonhuman primate. Am J
Ophthalmol 2002;133:373–385.
Schwesinger C, Yee C, Rohan RM, Joussen AM, Fernandez A, Meyer TN, Poulaki V, Ma JJ,
Redmond TM, Liu S, Adamis AP, D’Amato RJ: Intrachoroidal neovascularization in transgenic
mice overexpressing vascular endothelial growth factor in the retinal pigment epithelium. Am J
Pathol 2001;158:1161–1172.
Tripathi RC, Li J, Tripathi BJ, Chalam KV, Adamis AP: Increased level of vascular endothelial
growth factor in aqueous humor of patients with neovascular glaucoma. Ophthalmology 1998;105:
232–237.
Lashkari K, Hirose T, Yazdany J, McMeel JW, Kazlauskas A, Rahimi N: Vascular endothelial
growth factor and hepatocyte growth factor levels are differentially elevated in patients with
advanced retinopathy of prematurity. Am J Pathol 2000;156:1337–1344.
Funatsu H, Yamashita H, Ikeda T, Nakanishi Y, Kitano S, Hori S: Angiotensin II and vascular
endothelial growth factor in the vitreous fluid of patients with diabetic macular edema and other
retinal disorders. Am J Ophthalmol 2002;133:537–543.
Funatsu H, Yamashita H, Ikeda T, Mimura T, Eguchi S, Hori S: Vitreous levels of interleukin-6 and
vascular endothelial growth factor are related to diabetic macular edema. Ophthalmology
2003;110:1690–1696.
Funatsu H, Yamashita H, Sakata K, Noma H, Mimura T, Suzuki M, Eguchi S, Hori S: Vitreous levels of vascular endothelial growth factor and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 are related to diabetic macular edema. Ophthalmology 2005;112:806–816.
Kliffen M, Sharma HS, Mooy CM, Kerkvliet S, de Jong PT: Increased expression of angiogenic
growth factors in age-related maculopathy. Br J Ophthalmol 1997;81:154–162.
Lopez PF, Sippy BD, Lambert HM, Thach AB, Hinton DR: Transdifferentiated retinal pigment
epithelial cells are immunoreactive for vascular endothelial growth factor in surgically excised
age-related macular degeneration-related choroidal neovascular membranes. Invest Ophthalmol
Vis Sci 1996;37:855–868.
Frank RN, Amin RH, Eliott D, Puklin JE, Abrams GW: Basic fibroblast growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor are present in epiretinal and choroidal neovascular membranes. Am J
Ophthalmol 1996;122:393–403.
Grossniklaus HE, Ling JX, Wallace TM, Dithmar S, Lawson DH, Cohen C, Elner VM, Elner SG,
Sternberg P Jr: Macrophage and retinal pigment epithelium expression of angiogenic cytokines in
choroidal neovascularization. Mol Vis 2002;8:119–126.
Miller JW, Adamis AP, Shima DT, D’Amore PA, Moulton RS, O’Reilly MS, Folkman J, Dvorak HF,
Brown LF, Berse B, et al: Vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor is
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
146
dramroo@Yahoo.com
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
temporally and spatially correlated with ocular angiogenesis in a primate model. Am J Pathol
1994;145:574–584.
Tolentino MJ, Miller JW, Gragoudas ES, Jakobiec FA, Flynn E, Chatzistefanou K, Ferrara N,
Adamis AP: Intravitreous injections of vascular endothelial growth factor produce retinal
ischemia and microangiopathy in an adult primate. Ophthalmology 1996;103:1820–1828.
Baffi J, Byrnes G, Chan CC, Csaky KG: Choroidal neovascularization in the rat induced by adenovirus mediated expression of vascular endothelial growth factor. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
2000;41:3582–3589.
Spilsbury K, Garrett KL, Shen WY, Constable IJ, Rakoczy PE: Overexpression of vascular
endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the retinal pigment epithelium leads to the development of
choroidal neovascularization. Am J Pathol 2000;157:135–144.
Ohno-Matsui K, Hirose A, Yamamoto S, Saikia J, Okamoto N, Gehlbach P, Duh EJ, Hackett S,
Chang M, Bok D, Zack DJ, Campochiaro PA: Inducible expression of vascular endothelial growth
factor in adult mice causes severe proliferative retinopathy and retinal detachment. Am J Pathol
2002;160:711–719.
Agostini H, Boden K, Unsold A, Martin G, Hansen L, Fiedler U, Esser N, Marme D: A single local
injection of recombinant VEGF receptor 2 but not of Tie2 inhibits retinal neovascularization in the
mouse. Curr Eye Res 2005;30:249–257.
Honda M, Sakamoto T, Ishibashi T, Inomata H, Ueno H: Experimental subretinal neovascularization
is inhibited by adenovirus-mediated soluble VEGF/flt-1 receptor gene transfection: a role of VEGF
and possible treatment for SRN in age-related macular degeneration. Gene Ther 2000;7:978–985.
Bhisitkul RB, Robinson GS, Moulton RS, Claffey KP, Gragoudas ES, Miller JW: An antisense
oligodeoxynucleotide against vascular endothelial growth factor in a nonhuman primate model of
iris neovascularization. Arch Ophthalmol 2005;123:214–219.
Miyamoto K, Hiroshiba N, Tsujikawa A, Ogura Y: In vivo demonstration of increased leukocyte entrapment in retinal microcirculation of diabetic rats. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1998;39:2190–2194.
Comer GM, Ciulla TA: Pharmacotherapy for diabetic retinopathy. Curr Opin Ophthalmol
2004;15:508–518.
Aiello LP, Northrup JM, Keyt BA, Takagi H, Iwamoto MA: Hypoxic regulation of vascular
endothelial growth factor in retinal cells. Arch Ophthalmol 1995;113:1538–1544.
Famiglietti EV, Stopa EG, McGookin ED, Song P, LeBlanc V, Streeten BW: Immunocytochemical
localization of vascular endothelial growth factor in neurons and glial cells of human retina. Brain
Res 2003;969:195–204.
Shima D, Adamis A, Ferrara N, Yeo KT, Yeo TK, Allende R, Folkman J, D’Amore P: Hypoxic
induction of endothelial cell growth factors in retinal cells: identification and characterization of
vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) as the mitogen. Mol Med 1995;1:182–193.
Fong DS, Aiello LP, Ferris FL 3rd, Klein R: Diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes Care 2004;27:
2540–2553.
Lu M, Kuroki M, Amano S, Tolentino M, Keough K, Kim I, Bucala R, Adamis AP: Advanced glycation end products increase retinal vascular endothelial growth factor expression. J Clin Invest
1998;101:1219–1224.
Kuroki M, Voest EE, Amano S, Beerepoot LV, Takashima S, Tolentino M, Kim RY, Rohan RM,
Colby KA, Yeo KT, Adamis AP: Reactive oxygen intermediates increase vascular endothelial
growth factor expression in vitro and in vivo. J Clin Invest 1996;98:1667–1675.
Boulton M, Foreman D, Williams G, McLeod D: VEGF localisation in diabetic retinopathy. Br J
Ophthalmol 1998;82:561–568.
Funatsu H, Yamashita H, Shimizu E, Kojima R, Hori S: Relationship between vascular endothelial
growth factor and interleukin-6 in diabetic retinopathy. Retina 2001;21:469–477.
Brooks HL Jr, Caballero S Jr, Newell CK, Steinmetz RL, Watson D, Segal MS, Harrison JK,
Scott EW, Grant MB: Vitreous levels of vascular endothelial growth factor and stromal-derived
factor 1 in patients with diabetic retinopathy and cystoid macular edema before and after intraocular injection of triamcinolone. Arch Ophthalmol 2004;122:1801–1807.
Watanabe D, Suzuma K, Suzuma I, Ohashi H, Ojima T, Kurimoto M, Murakami T, Kimura T,
Takagi H: Vitreous levels of angiopoietin 2 and vascular endothelial growth factor in patients with
proliferative diabetic retinopathy. Am J Ophthalmol 2005;139:476–481.
Pegaptanib (Macugen®) in Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
147
103 Watanabe D, Suzuma K, Matsui S, Kurimoto M, Kiryu J, Kita M, Suzuma I, Ohashi H, Ojima T,
Murakami T, Kobayashi T, Masuda S, Nagao M, Yoshimura N, Takagi H: Erythropoietin as a retinal angiogenic factor in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. N Engl J Med 2005;353:782–792.
104 Williams B, Baker AQ, Gallacher B, Lodwick D: Angiotensin II increases vascular permeability
factor gene expression by human vascular smooth muscle cells. Hypertension 1995;25:913–917.
105 Chua CC, Hamdy RC, Chua BH: Upregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor by
angiotensin II in rat heart endothelial cells. Biochim Biophys Acta 1998;1401:187–194.
106 Kijowski J, Baj-Krzyworzeka M, Majka M, Reca R, Marquez LA, Christofidou-Solomidou M,
Janowska-Wieczorek A, Ratajczak MZ: The SDF-1-CXCR4 axis stimulates VEGF secretion and
activates integrins but does not affect proliferation and survival in lymphohematopoietic cells.
Stem Cells 2001;19:453–466.
107 Miyamoto K, Khosrof S, Bursell SE, Rohan R, Murata T, Clermont AC, Aiello LP, Ogura Y,
Adamis AP: Prevention of leukostasis and vascular leakage in streptozotocin-induced diabetic
retinopathy via intercellular adhesion molecule-1 inhibition. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1999;96:
10836–10841.
108 Qaum T, Xu Q, Joussen AM, Clemens MW, Qin W, Miyamoto K, Hassessian H, Wiegand SJ,
Rudge J, Yancopoulos GD, Adamis AP: VEGF-initiated blood-retinal barrier breakdown in early
diabetes. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2001;42:2408–2413.
109 Joussen AM, Poulaki V, Qin W, Kirchhof B, Mitsiades N, Wiegand SJ, Rudge J, Yancopoulos GD,
Adamis AP: Retinal vascular endothelial growth factor induces intercellular adhesion molecule-1
and endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression and initiates early diabetic retinal leukocyte adhesion in vivo. Am J Pathol 2002;160:501–509.
110 Ruckman J, Green LS, Beeson J, Waugh S, Gillette WL, Henninger DD, Claesson-Welsh L, Janjic N:
2⬘-Fluoropyrimidine RNA-based aptamers to the 165-amino acid form of vascular endothelial
growth factor (VEGF165). Inhibition of receptor binding and VEGF-induced vascular permeability
through interactions requiring the exon 7-encoded domain. J Biol Chem 1998;273:20556–20567.
111 Drolet DW, Nelson J, Tucker CE, Zack PM, Nixon K, Bolin R, Judkins MB, Farmer JA, Wolf JL,
Gill SC, Bendele RA: Pharmacokinetics and safety of an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor
aptamer (NX1838) following injection into the vitreous humor of rhesus monkeys. Pharm Res
2000;17:1503–1510.
112 Healy JM, Lewis SD, Kurz M, Boomer RM, Thompson KM, Wilson C, McCauley TG:
Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of novel aptamer compositions. Pharm Res 2004;21:
2234–2246.
113 Eyetech Study Group: Preclinical and phase 1A clinical evaluation of an anti-VEGF pegylated
aptamer (EYE001) for the treatment of exudative age-related macular degeneration. Retina
2002;22:143–152.
114 Tucker CE, Chen LS, Judkins MB, Farmer JA, Gill SC, Drolet DW: Detection and plasma pharmacokinetics of an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor oligonucleotide-aptamer (NX1838) in
rhesus monkeys. J Chromatogr B Biomed Sci Appl 1999;732:203–212.
115 Eyetech Study Group: Anti-vascular endothelial growth factor therapy for subfoveal choroidal
neovascularization secondary to age-related macular degeneration: phase II study results.
Ophthalmology 2003;110:979–986.
116 Ng EW, Adamis AP: Targeting angiogenesis, the underlying disorder in neovascular age-related
macular degeneration. Can J Ophthalmol 2005;40:352–368.
117 Gonzales CR: Enhanced efficacy associated with early treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration with pegaptanib sodium: an exploratory analysis. Retina 2005;25:815–827.
118 Macugen Diabetic Retinopathy Study Group: Changes in retinal neovascularization following
pegaptanib (Macugen) therapy in diabetic individuals. Ophthalmology 2006;113:23–28.
Carla Starita, MD, PhD
Pfizer Global Research and Development, Building 508/1.75 IPC 613
Ramsgate Road, Sandwich
CT13 9NJ Kent (UK)
Tel. ⫹44 1304 642915, Fax ⫹44 1304 652540, E-Mail Carla.starita@pfizer.com
Starita/Patel/Katz/Adamis
148
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 149–156
Pharmacologic Vitreolysis
Arnd Gandorfer
Vitreoretinal and Pathology Unit, Augenklinik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität,
München, Germany
Abstract
At present, surgical separation of the vitreous from the retina (posterior vitreous
detachment, PVD) is achieved by mechanical means only. However, with this technique,
complete removal of the cortical vitreous from the internal limiting membrane of the retina is
not feasible. As incomplete PVD and an attached vitreous cortex are associated with the progression of common retinal diseases including diabetic retinopathy and maculopathy, central
retinal vein occlusion and proliferative vitreoretinopathy, induction of complete PVD is a
major issue both in vitreoretinal surgery and in medical retina. This chapter focuses on current concepts of pharmacologic vitreolysis. Agents capable of altering the molecular organization of the vitreous are introduced and discussed in terms of PVD induction and
liquefaction of the vitreous gel.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
As the limits of conventional vitrectomy are being approached, vitreoretinal surgeons look forward to a new generation of pharmacological techniques
[1]. Several enzymes have been suggested as adjunctive therapy to vitreoretinal surgery or its replacement, including chondroitinase, hyaluronidase, dispase and plasmin enzyme (table 1). The goal of enzymatic vitreolysis is to
manipulate the vitreous collagen pharmacologically, achieving liquefaction
(synchisis) both centrally as well as along the vitreoretinal interface to induce
posterior vitreous detachment (PVD, syneresis) and to create a cleavage
plane more safely and cleaner than can currently be achieved by mechanical
means [2].
A.G. is founder of the Microplasmin Study Group and has a financial interest in pharmacologic vitreolysis.
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Table 1. Enzyme candidates for pharmacologic vitreolysis
Enzyme
Target
Effect
Chondroitinase
chondroitin sulfate at the
vitreoretinal interface
PVD in animal models
Hyaluronidase
hyaluronan
liquefaction
Dispase
type IV collagen
PVD, inner retinal damage
Plasmin/microplasmin
laminin and fibronectin at
the vitreoretinal interface;
matrix metalloproteinase-2
activation
PVD and liquefaction
Chondroitinase
A 240-kDa chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan is associated with the vitreoretinal interface [3]. The greatest immunoreactivity of this proteoglycan has
been observed in regions of firm vitreoretinal adhesion, such as the vitreous
base and the papillary margin, suggesting a major role in vitreoretinal adhesion.
The enzyme chondroitinase cleaves this proteoglycan and has been studied as
an adjunct in vitrectomy in 2 human donor eyes and in 57 cynomolgus monkeys
[3]. Intravitreal injection of the enzyme separated the vitreous from the retina
without damaging the inner limiting membrane (ILM). Three monkeys have
been followed for 14–16 months after surgery without any adverse effects [3].
Chondroitinase has also been utilized to detach epiretinal membranes in 4 monkeys, providing evidence that chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan participates in
the adhesion of epiretinal membranes to the ILM [3]. Unfortunately, no clinical
results have been reported yet.
Hyaluronidase
Hyaluronan represents one of the two major macromolecules of the vitreous
[4–6] and is supposed to maintain the 3-dimensional structure of the vitreous gel
by coating the collagen fibrils and by bridging them with interconnecting filaments [7]. Hyaluronidase (Vitrase®) cleaves hyaluronan and has been suggested
to liquify the vitreous.
A recently published phase III clinical trial shows that 55 IU of
highly purified ovine hyaluronidase (Vitrase) helps to clear eyes with vitreous
Gandorfer
150
dramroo@Yahoo.com
hemorrhage 1 month after intravitreal application [8]. In a companion article
on the safety results, no serious safety issues were reported [9]. In particular,
the incidence of retinal detachment was not statistically different between
treated and control groups. However, no assessment was performed in terms of
PVD induction, and experimental trials of hyaluronidase in rabbits failed to
achieve PVD [10].
Dispase
Dispase, a neutral 41-kDa protease isolated from Bacillus polymyxa, selectively cleaves type IV collagen and fibronectin [11]. The enzyme facilitated
PVD in enucleated porcine and human eyes, and in pig eyes in vivo [12, 13].
However, partial digestion of the ILM was observed in postmortem eyes, exposing the mosaic pattern of Müller cell endfeet [12]. In rabbit eyes in vivo and in
human eyes 15 min before enucleation, intravitreal injection of dispase caused
intraretinal hemorrhages and ILM disruption at bleeding sites [14]. In this
series, there was no effect of dispase on PVD induction.
As dispase acts on type IV collagen, forming the main structural protein of
basement membranes including the ILM, changes of the inner retina following
application of the enzyme are not surprising [12]. The enzyme has been shown
to effectively induce proliferative vitreoretinopathy in rabbits in a dose-dependent
fashion, known as the dispase model of proliferative vitreoretinopathy, and
future studies need to investigate the safety of dispase before clinical studies
can be considered [14, 15].
Plasmin
Plasmin is a nonspecific serine protease mediating the fibrinolytic process.
It also acts on a variety of glycoproteins including laminin and fibronectin, both
of which are present at the vitreoretinal interface [16–18]. In 1993, PVD could
be achieved in rabbit eyes by intravitreal injection of the enzyme followed by
vitrectomy [19]. In 1999, Hikichi et al. [20] confirmed complete PVD after
injection of 1 unit plasmin and 0.5 ml SF6 gas in the rabbit model, without evidence of retinal toxicity.
We investigated the effect of plasmin in porcine postmortem eyes and in
human donor eyes. In porcine eyes, we observed a dose-dependent separation
of the vitreous cortex from the ILM after intravitreal injection, without additional vitrectomy or gas injection [21]. In scanning electron microscopy, a bare
ILM was achieved by 1 unit of porcine plasmin 60 min after injection, and with
Pharmacologic Vitreolysis
151
dramroo@Yahoo.com
2 units of plasmin 30 and 60 min after injection, respectively. In control fellow
eyes which were injected with balanced salt solution, the cortical vitreous
remained attached to the retina [21]. In human donor eyes, 2 units of human
plasmin from pooled plasma achieved complete PVD 30 min after injection,
whereas the vitreoretinal surface of the fellow eyes was covered by collagen
fibrils [22]. In both studies, transmission electron microscopy revealed a clean
and perfectly preserved ILM in plasmin-treated eyes, and no evidence of inner
retinal damage [21, 22]. Li et al. [23] confirmed these results and reported a
reduced immunoreactivity of the vitreoretinal interface for laminin and
fibronectin following application of plasmin.
In an experimental setting simulating the application of plasmin as an
adjunct to vitrectomy, we injected human donor eyes with 1 unit of plasmin, followed by vitrectomy 30 min thereafter [24]. All plasmin-treated eyes showed
complete PVD, whereas the control eyes which were vitrectomized conventionally had various amounts of the cortical vitreous still present at the vitreoretinal
interface [24].
Plasmin is not available for clinical application, and alternative strategies
have been pursued to administer the enzyme in vitreoretinal surgery. Tissue
plasminogen activator was injected into the vitreous in an attempt to generate
plasmin by intravitreal activation of endogenous plasminogen. In an animal
model in rabbit eyes, complete PVD was observed in all eyes treated with 25 ␮g
tissue plasminogen activator [25]. Breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier was
necessary to allow plasminogen to enter the vitreous, and this was induced by
cryocoagulation [25]. In two clinical pilot studies, 25 ␮g tissue plasminogen
activator was injected into the vitreous of patients with proliferative diabetic
retinopathy 15 min before vitrectomy [26, 27]. However, the results of both
studies were contradictory in terms of PVD induction and clinical benefit.
Recently, Peyman’s group demonstrated PVD induction in rabbit eyes by an
intravitreal administration of recombinant lysine plasminogen and recombinant
urokinase [28].
Autologous plasminogen purified from the patient’s own plasma by
affinity chromatography was converted to plasmin by streptokinase in vitro.
Autologous plasmin enzyme, 0.4 units, was injected into the vitreous in
patients with pediatric macular holes, diabetic retinopathy and stage 3 idiopathic macular holes, followed by vitrectomy after 15 min [29–31]. All autologous plasmin enzyme-treated eyes achieved spontaneous or easy removal of
the posterior hyaloid including 1 eye that had vitreoschisis over areas of
detached retina.
Recombinant microplasmin (ThromboGenics Ltd., Dublin, Ireland), a
truncated molecule containing the catalytic domain of human plasmin, has been
administered successfully into the vitreous of human [32] and porcine postmortem
Gandorfer
152
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Fig. 1. Complete vitreoretinal separation following an intravitreal injection of microplasmin into a human donor eye.
Fig. 2. Collagen remnants at the vitreoretinal interface in a control eye.
Pharmacologic Vitreolysis
153
dramroo@Yahoo.com
eyes [M. de Smet, Monte Carlo, 2004], and in rabbit and cat eyes in vivo [32,
33]. In all experimental settings, complete PVD was achieved in a dose-dependent fashion (figs. 1, 2). No alteration in the inner retina was seen, and there
was no change in antigenicity of neurons and glial cells.
Summary
There are three reasons to pursue enzymatic-assisted vitreoretinal surgery.
First, some retinal diseases that are currently managed in an operation room
with mechanical manipulation of the vitreoretinal interface could be managed
more safely by pharmacologic technique or even in an office setting. Second,
enzymatic-assisted vitrectomy may achieve better anatomic and thus functional
results by creating a cleaner cleavage plane between the vitreous and the retina
than can be currently achieved by approaching the retina by mechanical
means [2]. This is of particular importance in eyes with incomplete removal of
the cortical vitreous from the retina, and in eyes with vitreoschisis, such as diabetic eyes [34]. Third, as incomplete PVD has been shown to be associated with
both development of aggressive fibrovascular proliferation and macular edema,
pharmacologic induction of complete PVD could prevent progression of diabetic retinopathy if given before advanced stages of diabetic eye disease.
Plasmin holds the promise of inducing complete PVD without morphologic alteration in the retina. Several independent studies confirmed a dosedependent and complete vitreoretinal separation, associated with perfect
preservation of the ultrastructure of the ILM and the retina [19–22, 24, 32]. In
addition, a dose-dependent liquefaction of the vitreous induced by microplasmin has been demonstrated by dynamic light scattering in dissected porcine vitreous and in intact pig eyes [Ansari, Monte Carlo, 2004], making plasmin and
microplasmin the most promising agents for pharmacologic vitreolysis at the
moment.
At present, clinical studies are performed to assess the safety and efficacy
of microplasmin and other pharmacologic enzymes when used as an adjunct to
vitrectomy, or even as its replacement.
References
1
2
3
Bhisitkul RB: Anticipation for enzymatic vitreolysis. Br J Ophthalmol 2001;85:1–2.
Trese M: Enzymatic-assisted vitrectomy. Eye 2002;16:365–368.
Hageman GS, Russell SR: Chondroitinase-mediated disinsertion of the primate vitreous body.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1994;35:1260.
Gandorfer
154
dramroo@Yahoo.com
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
Sebag J: Pharmacologic vitreolysis. Retina 1998;18:1–3.
Bishop P: The biochemical structure of mammalian vitreous. Eye 1996;10:664–670.
Sebag J: The Vitreous. Structure, Function, Pathobiology. New York, Springer, 1989.
Asakura A: Histochemistry of hyaluronic acid of the bovine vitreous body by electronmicroscopy.
Nippon Ganka Gakkai Zasshi 1985;89:179–191.
Kuppermann BD, Thomas EL, de Smet MD, Grillone LR: Pooled efficacy results from two multinational randomized controlled clinical trials of a single intravitreous injection of highly purified
ovine hyaluronidase (Vitrase) for the management of vitreous hemorrhage. Am J Ophthalmol
2005;140:573–584.
Kuppermann BD, Thomas EL, de Smet MD, Grillone LR: Safety results of two phase III trials of
an intravitreous injection of highly purified ovine hyaluronidase (Vitrase) for the management of
vitreous hemorrhage. Am J Ophthalmol 2005;140:585–597.
Hikichi T, Kado M, Yoshida A: Intravitreal injection of hyaluronidase cannot induce posterior vitreous detachment in the rabbit. Retina 2000;20:195–198.
Stenn KS, Link R, Moelmann G: Dispase, a neutral protease from Bacillus polymyxa, is a powerful fibronectinase and type IV collagenase. J Invest Dermatol 1989;93:287–290.
Tezel TH, Del Priore LV, Kaplan HJ: Posterior vitreous detachment with dispase. Retina
1998;18:7–15.
Oliveira LB, Tatebayashi M, Mahmoud TH, Blackmon SM, Wong F, McCuen BW 2nd: Dispase
facilitates posterior vitreous detachment during vitrectomy in young pigs. Retina 2001;21:
324–331.
Jorge R, Oyamaguchi EK, Cardillo JA, Gobbi A, Laicine EM, Haddad A: Intravitreal injection
of dispase causes retinal hemorrhages in rabbit and human eyes. Curr Eye Res 2003;26:
107–112.
Frenzel EM, Neely KA, Walsh AW, Cameron JD, Gregerson DS: A new model of proliferative vitreoretinopathy. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1998;39:2157–2164.
Kohno T, Sorgente N, Ishibashi T, Goodnight R, Ryan SJ: Immunofluorescent studies of fibronectin and laminin in the human eye. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1987;28:506–514.
Kohno T, Sorgente N, Goodnight R, Ryan SJ: Alterations in the distribution of fibronectin and
laminin in the diabetic human eye. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1987;28:515–521.
Liotta LA, Goldfarb RH, Brundage R, Siegal GP, Terranova V, Garbisa S: Effect of plasminogen
activator (urokinase), plasmin, and thrombin on glycoprotein and collagenous components of
basement membrane. Cancer Res 1981;41:4629–4636.
Verstraeten TC, Chapman C, Hartzer M, Winkler BS, Trese MT, Williams GA: Pharmacologic
induction of posterior vitreous detachment in the rabbit. Arch Ophthalmol 1993;111:849–854.
Hikichi T, Yanagiya N, Kado M, Akiba J, Yoshida A: Posterior vitreous detachment induced by injection of plasmin and sulfur hexafluoride in the rabbit vitreous. Retina 1999;19:
55–58.
Gandorfer A, Putz E, Welge-Lussen U, Gruterich M, Ulbig M, Kampik A: Ultrastructure of
the vitreoretinal interface following plasmin assisted vitrectomy. Br J Ophthalmol 2001;85:
6–10.
Gandorfer A, Priglinger S, Schebitz K, Hoops J, Ulbig M, Ruckhofer J, Grabner G, Kampik A:
Vitreoretinal morphology of plasmin-treated human eyes. Am J Ophthalmol 2002;133:
156–159.
Li X, Shi X, Fan J: Posterior vitreous detachment with plasmin in the isolated human eye. Graefes
Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2002;240:56–62.
Gandorfer A, Ulbig M, Kampik A: Plasmin-assisted vitrectomy eliminates cortical vitreous remnants. Eye 2002;16:95–97.
Hesse L, Nebeling B, Schroeder B, Heller G, Kroll P: Induction of posterior vitreous detachment
in rabbits by intravitreal injection of tissue plasminogen activator following cryopexy. Exp Eye
Res 2000;70:31–39.
Hesse L, Chofflet J, Kroll P: Tissue plasminogen activator as a biochemical adjuvant in vitrectomy
for proliferative diabetic vitreoretinopathy. Ger J Ophthalmol 1995;4:323–327.
Le Mer Y, Korobelnik JF, Morel C, Ullern M, Berrod JP: TPA-assisted vitrectomy for proliferative
diabetic retinopathy: results of a double-masked, multicenter trial. Retina 1999;19:378–382.
Pharmacologic Vitreolysis
155
dramroo@Yahoo.com
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
Men G, Peyman GA, Genaidy M, Kuo PC, Ghahramani F, Blake DA, Bezerra Y, Naaman G,
Figueiredo E: The role of recombinant lysine-plasminogen and recombinant urokinase and
sulfur hexafluoride combination in inducing posterior vitreous detachment. Retina 2004;24:
199–209.
Margherio AR, Margherio RR, Hartzer M, Trese MT, Williams GA, Ferrone PJ: Plasmin
enzyme-assisted vitrectomy in traumatic pediatric macular holes. Ophthalmology 1998;105:
1617–1620.
Trese MT, Williams GA, Hartzer MK: A new approach to stage 3 macular holes. Ophthalmology
2000;107:1607–1611.
Williams JG, Trese MT, Williams GA, Hartzer MK: Autologous plasmin enzyme in the surgical
management of diabetic retinopathy. Ophthalmology 2001;108:1902–1905.
Gandorfer A, Rohleder M, Sethi C, Eckle D, Welge-Lussen U, Kampik A, Luthert P, Charteris D:
Posterior vitreous detachment induced by microplasmin. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45:
641–647.
Sakuma T, Tanaka M, Mizota A, Inoue J, Pakola S: Safety of in vivo pharmacologic vitreolysis with recombinant microplasmin in rabbit eyes. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2005;46:
3295–3299.
Schwartz SD, Alexander R, Hiscott P, Gregor ZJ: Recognition of vitreoschisis in proliferative diabetic retinopathy. A useful landmark in vitrectomy for diabetic traction retinal detachment.
Ophthalmology 1996;103:323–328.
PD Dr. Arnd Gandorfer
Vitreoretinal and Pathology Unit
Augenklinik der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
Mathildenstrasse 8
DE–80336 München (Germany)
Tel. ⫹49 089 5160 3800, Fax ⫹49 089 5160 4778, E-Mail arnd.gandorfer@med.uni-muenchen.de
Gandorfer
156
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Lang GE (ed): Diabetic Retinopathy.
Dev Ophthalmol. Basel, Karger, 2007, vol 39, pp 157–165
Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy with
Protein Kinase C Subtype ␤ Inhibitor
Gabriele E. Lang
Augenklinik, Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Ulm, Germany
Abstract
Despite better options of controlling diabetes mellitus and although the prognosis of
diabetic retinopathy has markedly improved by laser treatment and vitreoretinal surgery, diabetic retinopathy is still the leading cause of blindness in working-age people in industrialized countries. Little has changed in the last decades concerning the prognosis of ocular
complications in diabetes mellitus. Therefore, we need better tools for prevention and treatment of diabetic ocular complications due to diabetic retinopathy that go beyond reduction in
glycemia, blood pressure and cholesterol levels. Newer therapeutic options are directed at the
causative mechanisms of diabetic retinopathy. Experimental and clinical evidence suggests
that pharmacological compounds like protein kinase C subtype ␤ (PKC-␤) inhibitors may be
effective in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy. One important pathomechanism in the
development of diabetic retinopathy is the activation of PKC induced by high glucose due to
an increased diacylglycerol level. The selective PKC-␤ inhibitor ruboxistaurin mesylate
enables a new therapeutical approach for the treatment of diabetic retinopathy and diabetic
macular edema. Ongoing prospective clinical trials investigate if treatment with the specific
PKC-␤ inhibitor ruboxistaurin mesylate can prevent the progression of diabetic retinopathy
and diabetic macular edema.
Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
The manifestation of diabetes mellitus is increasing rapidly in developed
countries. It is estimated to affect over 18 million Americans, and diabetic
retinopathy is the most common diabetic microvascular complication occurring
in nearly all patients after 20 years duration. Visual loss results primarily from
either proliferative diabetic retinopathy or macular edema. Proliferative diabetic retinopathy accounts for severe visual loss, whereas diabetic macular
edema is the leading cause of moderate visual loss in diabetes mellitus. Laser
photocoagulation, the mainstay of treatment of diabetic retinopathy for 4
decades, is considered to be effective in only 60–70% of cases.
dramroo@Yahoo.com
One of the main mechanisms by which the body regulates the activity of
tissue proteins is adding and removing phosphate groups – whether they are
receptors, enzymes, signal proteins, or transcription factors. In these reversible
processes, kinases add phosphate groups to tissue proteins at tyrosine residues
or at serine and threonine residues, and phosphatases remove the phosphate
groups [1].
However, the exact mechanisms by which diabetes mellitus causes diabetic
retinopathy remain incompletely understood. Four mechanisms have been implicated in the development of glycemic injury in vascular tissue: nonenzymatic
glycation forming advanced glycation end products, oxidative stress, aldose
reductase activation, and diacylglycerol (DAG)-mediated activation of protein
kinase C (PKC). Inhibition of the enzyme PKC represents an exciting therapeutic approach to managing diabetic retinopathy because PKC is involved in the
activation of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) gene. Inhibition of
the ␤-isoform of PKC inhibits VEGF in animal experiments. VEGF inhibition is
especially exciting in ophthalmology because VEGF is also involved in other
ocular disorders [2]. Presently, the PKC pathway is the focus of intense investigation in completed and ongoing diabetic retinopathy trials investigating its
effect on progression of diabetic retinopathy stage and macular edema.
Hyperglycemia-induced synthesis of DAG results in activation of PKC,
which is considered to play a central role in the development of diabetes complications (fig. 1). PKC adds phosphate groups to a host of protein substrates
within vascular tissues at serine and threonine residues and is considered one of
the major serine/threonine-specific protein kinases. By adding phosphate
groups, PKC modifies the receptor status of the phosphorylated substrate. PKC
is a family of at least 13 enzymes, of which the ␤-isoform has been closely
linked to the development of diabetic microvascular complications. The activation of PKC appears to mediate increased vascular permeability and neovascularization. PKC activation is important in the intracellular signaling of VEGF,
which is hypothesized to play a major role in the development of diabetic macular edema and proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
Protein Kinase C
PKC-␤ inhibitors act via influencing the cellular signal transduction by
inhibition of specific protein kinases. The balance of kinases and phosphatases
is important for cellular processes like growth, differentiation and motility.
PKC consists of a family of about 13 isoforms, which differ in structure, substrate requirements, location and function. The ␤-isoform has been most closely
linked to the development of diabetic retinopathy [3].
Lang
158
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Hyperglycemia
PKC-␤
inhibitor
⫺
DAG
AGE
⫹
⫹
PKC-␤
Glycation
Capillary leakage
⫹
VEGF
⫹
Capillary occlusion
Neovascularization
Fig. 1. Pathomechanism and treatment of diabetic retinopathy with PKC-␤ inhibitor.
Hyperglycemia results in the production of advanced glycation endproducts (AGE) and leads
to increased DAG levels. This results in an activation of PKC-␤, leading to an overexpression
of VEGF. Therefore, PKC-␤ activation results in capillary leakage and neovascularization.
These effects can be inhibited with the PKC-␤ inhibitor RBX.
The protein kinases can be divided into 4 classes according to the acceptor
amino acids: serine/threonine-, tyrosine-, histidine- und aspartate/glutamatespecific protein kinases. Serine/threonine-specific kinases, which are found in
all tissues, are divided into 3 groups: a cAMP-dependent protein kinase A, a
protein kinase B, and a calcium/phospholipid-activated PKC [4].
The PKC family was first isolated in 1977 as a proteolytic activated kinase
in rat brain [5]. PKC is a single polypeptide with an N-terminal regulatory
region and C-terminal catalytic regions (fig. 2). The conventional and novel isoforms are activated by DAG. The group of atypical PKC is not activated by
DAG [6].
The PKC pathways are responsible for cell growth and cell death. They are
regulated isoenzyme and cell specific [7]. PKC acts by catalyzing the transfer
of a phosphate group from ATP to various substrate proteins.
Several studies showed that the activation of PKC via hyperglycemia in
diabetics is associated with increased DAG levels in vascular tissue. This was
also proven for the retina. In recent studies, it was shown that PKC-␤ is
involved in vascular dysfunctions which are induced by hyperglycemia [8]. The
intracellular release of DAG is the primary step for activation of PKC.
PKC-␤ Inhibitor Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
159
PS
cPKC
nPKC
C1
C2
C3
N
C4
COOH
N
aPKC
naPKC
C1
COOH
N
COOH
N
COOH
Fig. 2. Schematic illustration of the primary structure of the PKC isoenzymes. The
PKC isoenzymes consist of a regulatory and a catalytic region: C1–C4. DAG, phosphatidylserine and phorbol esters bind to the C1 domain, calcium to the C2 region and ATP to
the C3 region. aPKC ⫽ atypical PKC; cPKC ⫽ conventional PKC; nPKC ⫽ novel PKC;
naPKC ⫽ newatypical; PKC; PS ⫽ pseudosubstrate.
PKC and Diabetic Retinopathy
The activation of PKC via hyperglycemia plays a central role in the development and progression of diabetic retinopathy [9]. Glucose gets into the cells
and is further metabolized via glycolysis. This results in the synthesis of
DAG. Increased DAG levels have been found in the retina of diabetics [10].
Hyperglycemia results in an increased DAG-PKC signal transduction in the
retina [11]. Furthermore, independent of DAG synthesis, lipid acids play an
important role in the modulation of PKC activation. However, the PKC isoenzymes in the various tissues are activated differently. PKC-␤ is the dominating isoenzyme in the retina. One reason for the privileged activation of PKC-␤
in diabetics is the high sensitivity against DAG [11]. It has been established that
PKC-␤ is activated very early in diabetes, well before clinically apparent
retinopathy. The activation of the DAG-PKC metabolic pathway leads to longacting structural and functional changes, which are associated with different
complications.
The vascular endothelial cells play a key role in the regulation of homeostasis, the vascular tonus, vessel permeability and thrombocyte activation.
Endothelial dysfunction and cell activation lead to the development of microangiopathy. Biochemial or mechanic stimulation releases a number of substances in
endothelial cells, such as, among others, angiotensin II, endothelin-1, transforming growth factor-␤, VEGF and prostaglandins. The PKC activation is an
important biochemical step in the hyperglycemia-induced endothelial dysfunction. PKC for example inhibits the nitric oxide-mediated vasodilation [12]. This
Lang
160
dramroo@Yahoo.com
is important because the inhibition of PKC can normalize the retinal microvascular hemodynamics.
The adhesion of monocytes on endothelial cells is increased in diabetes
mellitus. The membrane-associated activity of PKC in monocytes is markedly
elevated in diabetics and leads to an increased adhesion of monocytes on
endothelial vessel walls [13].
The activity of PKC plays an important role in the regulation of receptor
density on the cell surfaces for hormones, in the intracellular signal response, the
ion channel activity, the intracellular pH and the phosphorylation of proteins
[14]. The increased reactive contractility of smooth muscles, which is observed
in diabetic patients, is caused by hyperglycemia-induced PKC activation. Changes
in the intracellular calcium concentration are associated with the PKC activation
and modulate growth factor-induced mitogenesis and contraction. Finally, apoptosis of smooth vascular muscle cells are dependent on PKC [15].
The loss of endothelial cell barrier function is an early pathophysiological
phenomenon in diabetic retinopathy. The PKC-mediated phosphorylation of
junctional proteins and dissolution of tight junctions, as well as the relaxation
of cytoskeletal and adhesion proteins like caldesmon, vimentin, talin and
vinulin are responsible for increased vascular permeability caused by increased
glucose levels.
VEGF is not only the primary mediator of disturbed vascular permeability,
but also of neoangiogenesis. In eyes of diabetics, high VEGF levels were found.
When glucose levels are increased, the VEGF gene expression is dependent on
PKC. Diabetic macular edema and the majority of the neovascular response in
the retina is mediated by VEGF. Activation of PKC-␤ is involved in mediating
VEGF-induced intracellular signaling. The VEGF-induced disturbed bloodretinal barrier, endothelial cell proliferation and neoangiogenesis can be blocked
by ␤-specific PKC inhibition, although the PKC-␤ inhibitor is not primarily a
VEGF inhibitor [16]. In cellular and animal models, its antiproliferative effect is
weaker than its antipermeability activity [16, 17]. Over time, different growth
factors and cytokines are involved in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy.
The thickening of the capillary basement membrane and the increase in
extracellular matrix are the predominant vascular changes in the early phase of
diabetes mellitus. The basement membrane plays an important role concerning
vascular permeability, cellular adhesion, proliferation, differentiation and gene
expression. The production of collagen types IV and VI as well as fibronectin is
enhanced in diabetics. PKC inhibitors can prevent these effects.
Transforming growth factor-␤ and connective tissue growth factor play a
key role in the thickening of the basement membrane and the synthesis of extracellular matrix. The expression of these growth factors can be blocked by PKC
inhibition [18].
PKC-␤ Inhibitor Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
161
Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy with PKC-␤ Inhibitors
Recently, an isoenzyme-selective PKC inhibitor, ruboxistaurin mesylate
(RBX; Eli Lilly), was developed [19], which is orally administered. RBX is the
first of a new class of compounds and the most potent and selective PKC-␤
inhibitor being investigated. The treatment of diabetic rats with RBX showed
an amelioration of the retinal blood flow in a dose-responsive manner in parallel with its inhibition of the retinal PKC activity [20]. Aiello et al. [16] demonstrated that intravitreal injection of VEGF rapidly activates PKC in the retina
at concentrations observed clinically and increases retinal vasopermeability
in vivo by more than 3-fold. Intravitreal or oral administration of a PKC-␤
inhibitor resulted in ⬎95% inhibition of VEGF-induced permeability. RBX
reduces the VEGF-induced retinal blood-retinal barrier breakdown and neovascularization in animals. PKC inhibitors abolished both VEGF-induced
PKC activation and endothelial cell proliferation. The mitogenic effect of
VEGFs was inhibited by RBX in a concentration-dependent manner [17]. The
PKC-␤ inhibitor is effective in preventing diabetes-induced retinal vascular
leakage in animal models and in preventing retinal neovascularization. Danis
et al. [21] found that the PKC-␤ inhibitor RBX effectively inhibited preretinal
and optic nerve head neovascularization in a pig model of branch retinal vein
occlusion. They found a significantly decreased degree of neovascularization
in pig eyes with no apparent systemic toxicity. The ameliorative effect
seems to be a result of disruption of a key element of the intracellular signal
cascade by angiogenic growth factors, in particular VEGF. It has been shown
that the PKC pathway lies downstream of the VEGF receptor ligand binding
and is involved in mediating the proliferative response of endothelial cells
to VEGF.
RBX treatment can reduce the retinal vascular leakage in eyes that have
diabetic macular edema and markedly elevated leakage at doses between 4 and
32 mg/day. These data suggest that RBX treatment may be most prominent in
patients with severe macular edema [22].
In patients receiving 16 mg RBX twice daily, the diabetes-induced increase
in retinal circulation time was ameliorated. Increasing the RBX dose was linearly associated with greater effect on retinal circulation time. Similar results
were observed with retinal blood flow [23].
Treatment of diabetic macular edema patients for 3 months with multitargeted kinase inhibitor, which also acts as a nonspecific PKC inhibitor, led to
reduction in retinal thickening as evaluated by optical coherence tomography.
The systemic applicability of this nonselective compound was limited by gastrointestinal side effects and dose-related problems with tolerability, glycemic
control and liver toxicity [24].
Lang
162
dramroo@Yahoo.com
In a mulitcenter, double-masked, randomized, placebo-controlled study, the
safety and efficacy of the orally administered PKC-␤ isoform selective inhibitor
RBX was evaluated in subjects with moderately severe to very severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy. Two hundred and fifty-two subjects received placebo
or RBX (8, 16 or 32 mg/day) for 36–46 months. Patients had an Early Treatment
Diabetic Retinopathy Study retinopathy severity level between 47B and 53E
inclusive, an Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study visual acuity of 20/125
or better, and no history of scatter photocoagulation. Efficacy measurements
included progression of diabetic retinopathy, moderate visual loss and sustained
moderate visual loss. RBX was well tolerated without significant adverse events,
but had no significant effect on the progression of diabetic retinopathy. Compared
with placebo, 32 mg/day RBX was associated with a delayed occurrence of moderate visual loss (p ⫽ 0.038) and sustained moderate visual loss (p ⫽ 0.226). This
was evident only in eyes with definite diabetic macular edema at baseline
(p ⫽ 0.017). In multivariable Cox proportional hazard analysis, 32 mg/day RBX
significantly reduced the risk of moderate visual loss compared with placebo
(p ⫽ 0.012) [25]. In this clinical trial, RBX was well tolerated and reduced the
risk of visual loss but did not prevent diabetic retinopathy progression. The beneficial effect of RBX on moderate visual loss might be the result of improved retinal cell viability resulting from PKC-␤ inhibition. Reduction in PKC-␤ activity
might result in greater resistance of retinal vascular and neural cells to the pathologic stress of hyperglycemia and changes in hemodynamics like blood flow.
Further multicenter trials investigate if RBX can reduce the progression of
diabetic macular edema and diabetic retinopathy. One of the phase 3 clinical trials was finished recently, and it was announced by Eli Lilly and Company that
RBX significantly reduced the occurrence of sustained vision loss in patients
with moderately severe to very severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy,
showing a beneficial effect on the functional outcome. RBX reduced sustained
moderate vision loss by 40%. Twice as many RBX-treated eyes gained 15 or
more letters of visual acuity from baseline to endpoint. The detailed results of
the study are expected to be published this year. RBX would be the first oral
medication for treatment of diabetic retinopathy.
Side Effects
When considering systemic therapy, the safety profile of a compound is of
substantial importance. This is particularly true when inhibiting a key signaling
enzyme such as PKC, where substantial toxicity might be expected. Treatment of
diabetic macular edema patients with an inhibitor of multiple kinases and PKC
isoforms resulted in liver enzyme elevations, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea [24].
PKC-␤ Inhibitor Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
163
In contrast, RBX is selective for the ␤-isoform of PKC and highly selective for
PKC as compared with other kinases [25]. Indeed, RBX is very well tolerated
without significant adverse events over 52 months of treatment. Mild side effects
are rare. Only nine adverse events occurred, with an incidence exceeding 1%,
that were statistically different among the groups. No serious adverse events
were reported more frequently in the RBX treatment groups. The frequency of
nonserious adverse event occurrence of diarrhea, flatulence, nephropathy,
proteinuria and coronary artery disease was highest among patients in the
16-mg/day treatment group; there did not appear to be a RBX dose-response
effect. In addition, the small number of events makes it likely that any disparity
in the 16-mg group was due to chance. Patients taking the highest RBX dose of
32 mg/day did not experience these same events more frequently than placebo
patients. To date, over 1,400 patients have been exposed to RBX, and no clinically significant increase in adverse effects has been identified [25].
In a small study with 29 persons, Aiello et al. [23] found a statistically significant difference among treatment groups, showing that abdominal pain was
more common in the placebo group compared with RBX-treated persons.
Conclusions
New treatment modalities for diabetic retinopathy are clearly needed. The
next years will demonstrate exciting new therapies for diabetic microvascular
complications, the orally active RBX (Eli Lilly) for PKC inhibition possibly
being one of them. RBX provides an effective blockade of hyperglycemiainduced vascular injury and is safe for administration in humans. RBX treatment reduces visual loss in patients with moderately severe to very severe
nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
Donnelly R: Molecular mechanisms, therapeutic targets. Adv Stud Med 2004;3:1008–1013.
Dodsen PM: New trends in the management of diabetic retinopathy. Adv Stud Med 2004;3:1002–1012.
Hayashi A, Seki N, Hattori A, et al: PKCv, a new member of the protein kinase C family, composes
a fourth subfamily with PKC␮. Biochem Biophys Acta 1999;1450:99–106.
Idris I, Gray S, Donnelly R: Protein kinase C activation: isozyme-specific effects on metabolism
and cardiovascular complications in diabetes. Diabetologica 2001;44:659–673.
Inoue M, Kishimoto A, Takai Y, Nishizuka Y: Studies on a cyclic nucleotide-independent protein
kinase and its proenzyme in mammalian tissues. 2. Proenzyme and its activation by calciumdependent protease from rat brain. J Biol Chem 1977;252:7610–7616.
Kishimoto A, Takai Y, Mori T, et al: Activation of calcium and phospholipid-dependent protein
kinase by diacylglycerol, its possible relation to phosphatidylinositol turnover. J Biol Chem
1980;255:2273–2276.
Lang
164
dramroo@Yahoo.com
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Lang GE, Kampmeier J: Die Bedeutung der Proteinkinase C in der Pathophysiologie der diabetischen Retinopathie. Klin Monatsbl Augenheilkd 2002;219:769–776.
Lang GE: Pharmacological treatment of diabetic retinopathy. Ophthalmologica, in press.
Xia P, Inoguchi T, Kern TS, et al: Characterization of the mechanism for the chronic activation of
diacylglycerol-protein kinase C pathway in diabetes and hypergalactosemia. Diabetes 1994;43:
1122–1129.
Craven PA, Davidson CM, DeRubertis FR: Increase in diacylglycerol mass in isolated glomeruli
by glucose from de novo synthesis of glycerolipids. Diabetes 1990;39:667–674.
Nishizuka Y: The molecular heterogeneity of protein kinase C and its implication for cellular
regulation. Nature 1988;334:661–665.
Chakravarthy U, Hayes R, Stitt A, McAuley E, Archer DB: Constitutive nitric oxide synthase
expression in retinal vascular endothelial cells is suppressed by high glucose and advanced glycation end products. Diabetes 1998;47:945–952.
Kreuzer J, Denger S, Schmidts A, et al: Fibrinogen promotes monocyte adhesion via a protein
kinase C dependent mechanism. J Mol Med 1996;74:161–165.
Malhotra A, Reich D, Nakouzi A, Sanghi V, Greenen DL, Buttrick PM: Experimental diabetes
is associated with functional activation of protein kinase C ␧ and phosphorylation of troponin I
in the heart, which are prevented by angiotensin II receptor blockade. Circ Res 1997;81:
1027–1033.
Li PF, Maasch C, Haller H, et al: Requirement for protein kinase C in reactive oxygen speciesinduced apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells. Circulation 1999;100:967–973.
Aiello LP, Bursell SE, Clermont A, et al: Vascular endothelial growth factor-induced retinal permeability is mediated by protein kinase C in vivo and suppressed by an orally effective ␤-isoformselective inhibitor. Diabetes 1997;46:1473–1480.
Xia P, Aiello LP, Ishii H, Jiang ZY, Park DJ, Robbinson GS, Takagi H, Newsome WP, Jirousek MR,
King GL: Characterization of vascular endothelial growth factor’s effect on the activation of protein kinase C, its isoforms, and endothelial cell growth. J Clin Invest 1996;98:2018–2026.
Fumo P, Kuncio GS, Ziyadeh FN: PKC and high glucose stimulate collagen ␣1 (IV) transcriptional
activity in a reporter mesangial cell line. Am J Physiol 1994;267:632–638.
Liao DF, Monia B, Dean N, et al: Protein kinase C-␨ mediates angiotensin II activation of ERK1/2
in vascular smooth muscle cells. J Biol Chem 1997;272:6146–6150.
Ishii H, Jirousek MR, Koya D, Takagi C, Xia P, Clemont A, Bursell SE, Kern TS, Ballas LM,
Heath WF, Stramm LE, Feener EP, King GL: Amelioration of vascular dysfunctions in diabetic
rats by an oral PKC-␤ inhibitor. Science 1996;272:728–731.
Danis RP, Bingaman DP, Jirousek M, Yang Y: Inhibition of intraocular neovascularization caused
by retinal ischemia in pigs by PKC␤ inhibition with LY333531. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
1998;39:171–179.
Strom C, Sander B, Klemp K, Aiello LP, Lund-Andersen H, Larsen M: Effect of ruboxistaurin on
blood-retinal barrier permeability in relation to severity of leakage in diabetic macular edema.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2005;46:3855–3858.
Aiello LP, Clermont A, Arora V, Davis MD, Sheetz MJ, Bursell SE: Inhibition of PKC␤ by oral
administration of ruboxistaurin is well tolerated and ameliorates diabetes-induced retinal hemodynamic abnormalities in patients. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2006;47:86–92.
Campochiaro PA: Reduction of diabetic macular edema by oral administration of the kinase
inhibitor PKC412. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2004;45:922–931.
The PKC-DRS Study Group. The effect of ruboxistaurin on visual loss in patients with moderately
severe to severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy. Diabetes 2005;54:2188–2197.
Prof. Dr. Gabriele E. Lang
Universitätsklinikum Ulm, Augenklinik
Prittwitzstrasse 43
DE–89075 Ulm (Germany)
Tel. ⫹49 731 500 27551, Fax ⫹49 731 500 27549, E-Mail gabriele.lang@uniklinik-ulm.de
PKC-␤ Inhibitor Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy
dramroo@Yahoo.com
165
Subject Index
Adherens junctions, see Intercellular
junctions
Angiogenesis, regulators 111, 112, 125
Angiopoietin II, elevation in diabetic
retinopathy 129
Basement membrane, macular edema
changes 6
Blood-retinal barrier, breakdown in diabetes
2, 112
Cataract surgery
diabetics 81, 82, 84
intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide
combination 101, 102
Chondroitinase, pharmacologic vitreolysis
150
Cotton wool spots, optical coherence
tomography findings 44
Diabetic retinopathy
diabetes types and vision loss
mechanisms 14, 123
epidemiology 14, 52, 53, 113, 122
initial stages 13–15
intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide, see
Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide
Macugen therapy, see Macugen
macular edema, see Macular edema
nonproliferative stage
clinical management 24–26, 56
features 14–17, 48, 50, 51
optical coherence tomography, see
Optical coherence tomography
pathophysiology 49–52, 158
phenotypes
characterization 17–22
phenotype/genotype correlations
22–24
photocoagulation, see Laser treatment
progression under glycemic control 21,
22, 113, 115
protein kinase C inhibitor therapy, see
Ruboxistaurin mesylate
risk assessment and factors 26–29, 54
severity scale 52, 53
somatostatin analog management, see
Somatostatin
vitrectomy, see Vitrectomy
Dispase, pharmacologic vitreolysis 151
Endothelial cell macular edema damage and
apoptosis 8
Endothelial precursor cell (EPC),
recruitment in macular edema 7, 8
Extracellular matrix (ECM), macular edema
changes 5, 6
Fas ligand, endothelial cell apoptosis in
macular edema 8
Gap junctions, see Intercellular junctions
Glaucoma, neovascular
intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide 100,
101
vitreoretinal surgery 77, 78
Gonioscopy, diabetic patient evaluation
55
166
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Hard exudates, optical coherence
tomography findings 43, 50
Hyaluronidase, pharmacologic vitreolysis
150, 151
Hypoxia, angiogenesis stimulation 112
Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)
diabetic retinopathy role 112, 114
therapeutic targeting 114, 115
Intercellular junctions
diabetic retinopathy alterations 4, 5
regulation 5
retinal composition 4
Interleukin-6 (IL-6), elevation in diabetic
retinopathy 129
Internal limiting membrane (ILM)
peeling in macular edema surgery 80,
81, 93
ultrastructure in diffuse macular edema
90
Interretinal microvascular anomalies,
diagnosis 50, 51
Intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1),
elevation in diabetic retinopathy
129, 130
Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide (IVTA)
cataract surgery combination 101, 102
complications 102–106
diffuse macular edema management
97–99
indications 96, 97
mechanism of action 99
neovascular glaucoma management 100,
101
posterior sub-Tenon injection 99, 100
prospects 106
vitrectomy combination 100
Laser treatment
diabetic retinopathy
Diabetic Retinopathy Study 56, 57
mechanism of action 123
nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
57
outcomes 60, 157
proliferative diabetic retinopathy 57
technique 57–60
guidelines 64, 65
historical perspective 48
macular edema 60–64
patient evaluation 54–56
refractive cases and vitrectomy 74
side effects 65, 66
wavelength 64
Macugen
clinical trials
Phase II trial
retinal neovascularization 138–140
retinal thickness 137, 138
safety 140–142
study design 134, 135
vision outcomes 135
VISION trials 134
mechanism of action 131, 132
pharmacokinetics 132
preclinical studies 132
prospects in diabetic retinopathy
treatment 142
Macular edema
blood-retinal barrier breakdown in
diabetes 2
diffuse macular edema
epiretinal cellular proliferation 91
intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide
97–99
pathophysiology 89
treatment 91, 93
vitreoschisis 89, 90
vitreous cortex ultrastructural findings
90
vitreous origins 89
endothelial cell damage and apoptosis 8
endothelial precursor cell recruitment 7,
8
epidemiology in diabetes 88
extracellular matrix changes 5, 6
focal versus diffuse disease 88
intercellular junctions
diabetic retinopathy alterations 4, 5
regulation 5
retinal composition 4
leukocyte infiltration 6, 7
Macugen therapy, see Macugen
Subject Index
167
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Macular edema (continued)
optical coherence tomography findings
35–38, 40, 41, 43
photocoagulation, see Laser treatment
severity scale 52, 53
treatment options 9
vascular endothelial growth factor
diffuse macular edema role 90
neovascularization 3
vascular hyperpermeability
induction 3
vitrectomy, see Vitrectomy
vitreoretinal surgery 78–81
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs),
macular edema role 5, 6
Neovascular glaucoma, see Glaucoma,
neovascular
Octreotide, see Somatostatin
Ophthalmoscopy, diabetic patient evaluation
54, 55
Optical coherence tomography (OCT)
applications 32
cotton wool spots 44
hard exudates 43
interpretation 34, 35
macular edema findings 35–38, 40, 41, 43
principles 31–34
proliferative diabetic retinopathy findings
44
retinal hemorrhage 44
technique 33, 34
Pegaptanib, see Macugen
Pharmacologic vitreolysis
chondroitinase 150
dispase 151
hyaluronidase 150, 151
plasmin 151–164
prospects 154
rationale 149, 153, 154
Photocoagulation, see Laser treatment
Pigment endothelial-derived factor (PEDF),
angiogenesis regulation 112
Plasmin, pharmacologic vitreolysis
151–164
Protein kinase C (PKC)
classification 159
diabetic retinopathy
pathophysiology 160, 161
ruboxistaurin mesylate treatment
outcomes 162–164
side effects 163, 164
vascular endothelial growth factor
response 162
therapeutic targeting 26, 161
functional overview 159
vascular endothelial growth factor
activation 158, 161
Retinal detachment, optical coherence
tomography findings in proliferative
diabetic retinopathy 44
Retinal hemorrhage, optical coherence
tomography findings 44
Retinal thickness
Macugen response 137, 138
macular edema 37, 38, 40, 41
optical coherence tomography 33,
34, 41
Ruboxistaurin mesylate (RBX)
diabetic retinopathy outcomes 162–164
side effects 163, 164
vascular endothelial growth factor
response 162
Silicone oil tamponade, vitrectomy in
diabetes 71, 77, 83
Somatostatin
analogs in diabetic retinopathy
management
dosing 115, 116
mechanisms of action 116, 117
octreotide
advanced disease management
116
effects on progression 116
prospects 118
side effects 117
growth hormone antagonism 115
receptors 115
Stromal-derived factor-1, elevation in
diabetic retinopathy 129
Subject Index
168
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Triamcinolone acetonide, see Intravitreal
triamcinolone acetonide
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)
angiogenesis regulation 125–127
biological activity 126
diabetic retinopathy role 129–131
diffuse macular edema role 90
hypoxia stimulation 112, 114
inflammation role 129–131
intercellular junction regulation 5
intracellular adhesion molecule-1
induction 129, 130
isoforms 124–126
neovascularization induction in eye 3,
128, 129
receptors 126
ruboxistaurin mesylate response 162
therapeutic targeting
early macular edema 9
Macugen, see Macugen
rationale 124, 126
vascular hyperpermeability induction 3, 49
Venous beading, diagnosis 50, 51
Vitrectomy
cataract surgery in diabetics 81, 82, 84
early vitrectomy for proliferative
diabetic retinopathy and vitreous
hemorrhage
Diabetic Retinopathy Vitrectomy Study
72–74, 83
Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy
Study 72
emergencies 73
vitreomacular traction 73, 74
indications in diabetic retinopathy 69,
70, 83
intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide
combination 100
macular edema and vitreoretinal surgery
78–81
neovascular glaucoma and vitreoretinal
surgery 77, 78
pars plana vitrectomy for tractional
detachment 74–76, 123
proliferative vitreoretinopathy tractional
retinal detachment 76, 77
refractive photocoagulation cases 74
technique 70–72
Vitreolysis, see Pharmacologic vitreolysis
Subject Index
169
dramroo@Yahoo.com
Скачать