These pages are best viewed with Netscape version 3.0
or higher or Internet Explorer version 3.0 or higher. When viewed with
other browsers, some characters or attributes may not be rendered
correctly.
POSITION STATEMENT
Diabetic Retinopathy
American Diabetes Association
SCREENING FOR DIABETIC RETINOPATHY Diabetic retinopathy
is a highly specific vascular complication of both type 1 and type 2
diabetes. The prevalence of retinopathy is strongly related to the
duration of diabetes. After 20 years of diabetes, nearly all patients with
type 1 diabetes and >60% of patients with type 2 diabetes have some
degree of retinopathy. Diabetic retinopathy poses a serious threat to
vision. In the Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy
(WESDR), 3.6% of younger-onset patients (aged <30 years at diagnosis,
an operational definition of type 1 diabetes) and 1.6% of older-onset
patients (aged >30 years at diagnosis, an operational definition
of type 2 diabetes) were legally blind. In the younger-onset group, 86% of
blindness was attributable to diabetic retinopathy. In the older-onset
group, where other eye diseases were common, one-third of the cases of
legal blindness were due to diabetic retinopathy. Overall, diabetic
retinopathy is estimated to be the most frequent cause of new cases of
blindness among adults aged 20 74 years.
The
recommendations in this paper are based on the technical review on the
subject (1),
which should be consulted for further information.
NATURAL
HISTORY OF DIABETIC RETINOPATHY Screening strategies
depend on the rates of appearance and progression of diabetic retinopathy
and on risk factors that alter these rates. Vision-threatening retinopathy
virtually never appears in type 1 patients in the first 3 5 years of diabetes or
before puberty. Over the subsequent 2 decades, nearly all type 1 patients
develop retinopathy. Up to 21% of patients with type 2 diabetes have
recently been found to have retinopathy at the time of first diagnosis of
diabetes, and most develop some degree of retinopathy over subsequent
decades.
In general, the progression of retinopathy is orderly,
advancing from mild nonproliferative abnormalities, characterized by
increased vascular permeability, to moderate and severe nonproliferative
diabetic retinopathy (NPDR), characterized by vascular closure, to
proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR), characterized by the growth of
new blood vessels on the retina and posterior surface of the vitreous.
Pregnancy, puberty, and cataract surgery can accelerate these changes.
Vision loss due to diabetic retinopathy results from several
mechanisms. First, central vision may be impaired by macular edema or
capillary nonperfusion. Second, the new blood vessels of PDR and
contraction of the accompanying fibrous tissue can distort the retina and
lead to tractional retinal detachment, producing severe and often
irreversible vision loss. Third, the new blood vessels may bleed, adding
the further complication of preretinal or vitreous hemorrhage.
There are several epidemiological studies describing the onset and
progression of diabetic retinopathy. The WESDR can serve as a
representative model. The WESDR attempted to identify all diabetic
patients treated by physicians in an 11-county area in southern Wisconsin.
Between 1979 and 1980, 1,210 patients with younger-onset diabetes and
1,780 patients with older-onset diabetes were entered into the study.
Patients had several clinical assessments, including seven-field stereo
fundus photographs and measurement of glycated hemoglobin. A 4-year
follow-up examination repeated the fundus photographs. The WESDR found the
relationship described above between onset of retinopathy and duration of
diabetes. It also established that progression of retinopathy was a
function of baseline retinopathy. The more severe the baseline
retinopathy, the greater the frequency of progression to
vision-threatening retinopathy. Conversely, among type 2 diabetic patients
whose baseline photographs showed no retinopathy, there was less PDR or
progression to severe macular edema over 4 years. The WESDR
epidemiological data were limited primarily to white northern European
extraction populations and may not be applicable to African-American,
Hispanic-American, or Asian-American populations or to others with a high
prevalence of diabetes and retinopathy.
There has been extensive
research on potential risk factors for retinopathy. There is now a large
and consistent set of observational studies documenting the association of
poor glucose control and retinopathy.
In the Diabetes Control and
Complications Trial (DCCT), a definitive relationship was demonstrated in
type 1 diabetes between hyperglycemia and diabetic microvascular
complications, including retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy. A group
of 1,441 patients with type 1 diabetes who had either no retinopathy at
baseline (primary prevention cohort) or with minimal-to-moderate NPDR
(secondary progression cohort) were treated by either conventional therapy
or intensive diabetes management with three or more daily insulin
injections or a continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion. In contrast,
conventional therapy included one or two daily injections of insulin. The
patients were followed for 4 9 years with
seven-field stereoscopic photography every 6 months. The DCCT showed that
intensive insulin therapy reduced or prevented the development of
retinopathy by 27% as compared with conventional therapy. In addition,
intensive therapy reduced the progression of diabetic retinopathy
by 34 76%. Early treatment
with intensive therapy was most effective. However, intensive therapy had
a substantial beneficial effect over the entire range of retinopathy. This
improvement was achieved with an average 10% reduction in HbA1c
from 8 to 7.2%. These results showed that while intensive therapy does not
prevent retinopathy completely, it reduces the risk of the development and
progression of diabetic retinopathy. This can be translated clinically to
a preservation of eyesight and reduced need for laser treatment.
It also seems clear that proteinuria is associated with
retinopathy. High blood pressure is an established risk factor for the
development of macular edema and is associated with the presence of PDR.
Observations indicate an association of serum lipid levels with lipid in
the retina (hard exudates) and visual loss. Thus, systemic control of
blood pressure and serum lipids may be important in the management of
diabetic retinopathy. In addition, several case series and a controlled
prospective study suggest that pregnancy in type 1 diabetic patients may
aggravate retinopathy.
EFFICACY OF LASER
PHOTOCOAGULATION SURGERY One of the main
motivations for screening for diabetic retinopathy is the established
efficacy of laser photocoagulation surgery in preventing visual loss. Two
large National Institutes of Health sponsored trials, the Diabetic
Retinopathy Study (DRS) and the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study
(ETDRS), provide the strongest support for the therapeutic benefit of
photocoagulation surgery.
The DRS tested whether scatter
(panretinal) photocoagulation surgery could reduce the risk of vision loss
from PDR. There were 1,758 participating patients. By the 2-year analysis,
a dramatic benefit of photocoagulation surgery was evident. Severe visual
loss (i.e., best acuity of 5/200 or worse) was seen in 15.9% of untreated
eyes versus 6.4% of treated eyes. The benefit was greatest among patients
whose baseline evaluation revealed high-risk characteristics (HRCs)
(chiefly disc neovascularization or vitreous hemorrhage with any retinal
neovascularization). Of control eyes with HRC, 26% progressed to severe
visual loss versus 11% of treated eyes. The absolute benefit of
photocoagulation surgery was much smaller for eyes that did not have HRC.
Given the risk of a modest loss of visual acuity and of contraction of
visual field from panretinal laser surgery, such therapy has been
primarily recommended for eyes approaching or reaching HRCs.
ETDRS
assessed the value of argon laser surgery and aspirin in early PDR,
moderate-to-severe NPDR, and diabetic macular edema (a complication seen
in the presence of both PDR and NPDR). The ETDRS established the benefit
of focal laser photocoagulation surgery in eyes with macular edema,
particularly those with clinically significant macular edema. In the part
of the ETDRS that studied macular edema, 1,490 eyes with macular edema
were randomized to deferral of photocoagulation surgery (until PDR with
HRC occurred) and 754 eyes were randomized to immediate focal
photocoagulation surgery. In patients with clinically significant macular
edema after 2 years, 20% of untreated eyes had a doubling of the visual
angle (e.g., 20/50 to 20/100) compared with 8% of treated eyes. In other
results from the ETDRS, aspirin did not prevent the development of
high-risk PDR and did not reduce the risk of visual loss, nor increase the
risk of vitreous hemorrhage. The relative risk of vitreous or preretinal
hemorrhage for patients assigned to aspirin compared with patients
assigned to placebo in eyes that had new vessels definitely present at
baseline was 1.05 (99% CI [0.81 1.36]). This included
patients in the deferral group who in follow-up had scatter laser
photocoagulation surgery on reaching HRC. These findings suggest there are
no ocular contraindications to aspirin when required for cardiovascular
disease or other medical indications.
Other results from the ETDRS
indicate that, provided careful follow-up can be maintained, scatter
photocoagulation surgery is not recommended for eyes with mild or moderate
NPDR. When retinopathy is more severe, scatter photocoagulation surgery
should be considered, and usually should not be delayed, if the eye has
reached the high-risk proliferative stage. In older-onset patients with
severe NPDR or less than high-risk PDR, the risk of severe visual loss and
vitrectomy is reduced ~50% by laser photocoagulation surgery at these
earlier stages.
Laser photocoagulation surgery in both the DRS and
the ETDRS was beneficial in reducing the risk of further visual loss, but
generally not beneficial in reversing already diminished acuity. This
preventive effect and the fact that patients with PDR or macular edema may
be asymptomatic provide strong support for a screening program to detect
diabetic retinopathy.
COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF SCREENING FOR
RETINOPATHY There have
been several cost-effectiveness analyses of screening for diabetic
retinopathy. The currently published analyses have assessed semiannual,
annual, and biennial screening programs. Although the modeling techniques
and the component costs have differed substantially, the basic message of
all these analyses is the same. Screening for diabetic retinopathy saves
vision at a relatively low cost, and even this cost is often less than the
disability payments provided to people who would go blind in the absence
of a screening program.
SUMMARY AND
RECOMMENDATIONS Treatment
modalities exist that can prevent or delay the onset of diabetic
retinopathy, as well as prevent loss of vision, in a large proportion of
patients with diabetes. The DCCT established that intensive diabetes
management to obtain near-euglycemic control can prevent and delay the
progression of diabetic retinopathy for the patient with type 1 diabetes.
Timely laser photocoagulation therapy can also prevent loss of vision in a
large proportion of patients with severe NPDR and PDR and/or macular
edema. Since some patients with vision-threatening pathologies may not
have symptoms, ongoing evaluation for retinopathy is a valuable and
required strategy.
Dilated ETDRS sevenstandard field
stereoscopic 30° fundus photography is more sensitive at detecting
retinopathy than is clinical examination, although clinical examination is
often superior for detecting retinal thickening associated with macular
edema and may be better at identifying fine caliber neovascularization of
the optic disk or elsewhere in the retina. Proper fundus photographs
require a photographer skilled in obtaining the rigorously defined and
technically challenging ETDRS photographic fields of appropriate quality
and a reader skilled in the interpretation of the photographs. If either
of these components is not available or do not meet the defined standards,
then they cannot be substituted for a dilated ophthalmic examination by an
eye care provider with experience in the management of diabetic
retinopathy, even for screening purposes.
Recent techniques permit
the acquisition of high-quality photographs through undilated pupils and
the acquisition of images in digital format. Although this may eventually
permit undilated photographic retinopathy screening, no rigorous studies
to date validate the equivalence of these photographs with seven standard field
stereoscopic 30° fundus photography for assessing diabetic retinopathy.
The use of the nonmydriatic camera for follow-up of patients with diabetes
in the physician's office might be considered only in situations where
dilated eye examination cannot be obtained. However, at this time, these
technologies are not considered a replacement for dilated seven standard field
stereoscopic fundus photography or for eye examinations by an experienced
ophthalmologist or optometrist for the screening, diagnosis, grading, or
treatment of diabetic retinopathy.
The recommendations for initial
and subsequent ophthalmologic evaluation of patients with diabetes are
stated below and summarized in Table 1:
GUIDELINES
1. Patients >10 years of age with type 1 diabetes should
have an initial dilated and comprehensive eye examination by an
ophthalmologist or optometrist within 3 5 years after the
onset of diabetes. In general, screening for diabetic eye disease is not
necessary before 10 years of age. Patients with type 2 diabetes should
have an initial dilated and comprehensive eye examination by an
ophthalmologist or optometrist shortly after the diagnosis of diabetes
is made.
2. Subsequent examinations for both type 1 and type 2
diabetic patients should be repeated annually by an ophthalmologist or
optometrist who is knowledgeable and experienced in diagnosing the
presence of diabetic retinopathy and is aware of its management.
Examinations will be required more frequently if retinopathy is
progressing. This follow-up interval is recommended recognizing that
there are limited data addressing this issue. As previously discussed,
data from WESDR showed that patients with type 2 diabetes who received
ETDRS standard seven-field stereoscopic color fundus photographs that
revealed no retinopathy when evaluated by a skilled reader did not
generally require another retinopathy examination for 4 years because of
low risk of disease progression. However, in patients with gross
proteinuria or poor glycemic control (>2 SD from the mean of the
nondiabetic population), annual examinations were indicated even if the
initial review using fundus photography revealed no retinopathy. Despite
the WESDR findings, we believe that an annual eye examination is still
warranted for the following reasons. First, these data were derived from
a study that evaluated white, northern European extraction patients
with diabetes living in southern Wisconsin. The results may not be
applicable to African-American, Hispanic-American, Asian-American, or
other populations where it is unknown if retinopathy progresses in the
same manner. Second, a well-designed quality-control program was used in
WESDR to ensure accurate interpretation of fundus photographs. Such
quality control efforts have not been standardized or completely
described, let alone adopted nationwide. Third, the potential for
patient loss to follow-up induced by an extended hiatus between
ophthalmic evaluations introduces further uncertainty.
3. When
planning pregnancy, women with preexisting diabetes should have a
comprehensive eye examination and should be counseled on the risk of
development and/or progression of diabetic retinopathy. Women with
diabetes who become pregnant should have a comprehensive eye examination
in the 1st trimester and close follow-up throughout pregnancy (Table 1).
This guideline does not apply to women who develop gestational diabetes
because such individuals are not at increased risk for diabetic
retinopathy.
4. Patients with any level of macular edema, severe
NPDR, or any PDR require the prompt care of an ophthalmologist who is
knowledgeable and experienced in the management and treatment of
diabetic retinopathy. Referral to an ophthalmologist should not be
delayed until PDR has developed in patients who are known to have severe
nonproliferative or more advanced retinopathy. Early referral to an
ophthalmologist is particularly important for patients with type 2
diabetes and severe NPDR, since laser treatment at this stage is
associated with a 50% reduction in the risk of severe visual loss and
vitrectomy.
5. Patients who experience vision loss from diabetes
should be encouraged to pursue visual rehabilitation with an
ophthalmologist or optometrist who is trained or experienced in
low-vision care.
Acknowledgments This manuscript was
developed in cooperation with the American College of Physicians (Daniel
E. Singer, MD), the American Optometric Association (Jerry D. Cavallerano,
OD, PhD), and the American Academy of Ophthalmology (George Blankenship,
MD). We gratefully acknowledge the invaluable assistance of these
associations and their designated representatives.
References
1. Aiello LP,
Gardner TW, King GL, Blankenship G, Cavallerano JD, Ferris FL, Klein R:
Diabetic retinopathy (Technical Review). Diabetes Care
21:143156, 1998
The initial draft of this paper was prepared by Lloyd Paul Aiello, MD,
PhD; Thomas W. Gardner, MD; George L. King, MD; George Blankenship, MD;
Jerry D. Cavallerano, OD, PhD; Fredrick L. Ferris, III, MD; and Ronald
Klein, MD, MPH. The paper was peer-reviewed, modified, and approved by the
Professional Practice Committee and the Executive Committee in November
1997.
The recommendations in this paper are based on the evidence
reviewed in the following publication: Diabetic retinopathy (Technical
Review). Diabetes Care 21:143156, 1998.
Abbreviations: DCCT, Diabetes Control and
Complications Trial; DRS, Diabetic Retinopathy Study; ETDRS, Early
Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study; HRC, high-risk characteristic; NPDR,
nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy; PDR, proliferative diabetic
retinopathy; WESDR, Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy.
|