Title: The Challenge Continues: Diabetic Blindness
1The Challenge Continues Diabetic Blindness
- Barbara Davis Center Eye (BDCi)
- William Jackson, M.D.
- Garrett Mitchell, B.A.
- Lynne Bentsen, M.A.
- Chris Orgon, B.S.
2Goal Prevention of Blindness
3Prevention of Diabetic Blindness
- Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness in
adults in the united states (ages 20-74) - Over 90 percent is preventable
4Why Do We Need to Stage Diabetic Retinopathy (DR)?
- Almost all diabetic patients will eventually
develop retinopathy - This DR is
- orderly
- slowly progressive
- reversible
- chronic
- frequently asymptomatic until end stage
5Why Do We Need to Screen for Diabetic Retinopathy?
- If you cant see it, you cant treat it
- early detection is a vital plank in the campaign
to prevent diabetic blindness - DR is very highly amenable to detection
- is responsive to medical/surgical therapies
- Different diagnostic methods exist
6The Human Cost of Not Screening
- History
- 29 year old patient IDDM 18 yrs
- Over 5 years without any health care
- Patients vision at first visit was counting
fingers at 2 feet in the right eye and 20/100 in
the left eye
7The Human Cost of Not Screening
- Pathology
- severe neovascular glaucoma IOPgt80(OD)
- rubeosis (OD)
- corneal edema (OD)
- marked diabetic macular edema (OU OD more than
OS) and - proliferative diabetic retinopathy (OU OD more
than OS)
8Example of Rubeosis
9Retinal Images The Human Cost of Not Screening
10Reasons to Screen
- Patient 2 History
- 27 years old
- Patient had been having regular dilated eye exams
and she was told that she did not have any
diabetic damage - Patient had a non-dilated screening at the
Barbara Davis Center
11Reasons to Screen
- Pathology
- Vision Threatening Proliferative DR (OU)
- Retinal Neovascularization (OU)
- Vitreous Hemorrhage OS
12Retinal Images Patient 2
13Diabetic Retinal Staging
- Diagnostic methods are changing and challenging
14Instruments
- Direct ophthalmoscope
-
- Non-Mydriatic digital retinal camera
15Retinal Imaging Systems
- Canon
- Zeiss
- Topcon
- Aris
- EyeTel
- Inoveon
16ADA Guidelines for Retinal Exam in Diabetic
Patients
- Annual dilated eye exam after at least 5 years of
diabetes in patients 10-29 yr old - Annual dilated eye exam regardless of duration
in patients older than 30 - Immediately if visually symptomatic
- Pregnant or planning to get pregnant
17Classification Systems
- Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study
(ETDRS) - Complex, landmark diabetic retinopathy study with
a most challenging classification system - Airlie-House
- Complex grades given to each diabetic lesion
depending upon severity
18Classification Systems (Continued)
- Modified Airlie-House Classification System (used
at the Barbara Davis Center) - Relatively user friendly simplified scale images
graded from 1 (no retinopathy) to 6
(proliferative retinopathy) - New simplified International Clinical Diabetic
Retinopathy (ICDR) - Further simplified scale five levels of disease
severity from No apparent DR to Proliferative DR
19Classification Systems (Continued)
- Simplified Classification System
- Simple classification systems grades images as
mild, moderate or severe.
20Retinal Staging at the BDC
21Newer Alternative Therapies for Diabetic
Retinopathy
- 1 - Vitrectomy
- 2 - Steroid - intravitreol
- retroseptal
- intravitreol implants
- (variable duration - up to 3
- years of sustained release)
- Complications
- Glaucoma, cataract
22Vasoendothelial Growth Factors VEGF
- Permeability Factors
- Angiogenic Factors
- Survival Factor
- Proinflammatory Factor
- Neuroprotectant Factor
- Fenestration Factor
- Thrombosis Factor
- Vasodilator Factor
23New Compounds
24Diabetic Retinopathy Risk Factors
- Duration, Glucose Control and Waist-to-Hip Ratio
Porta M, et al. EURODIAB Prospective
Complications Study Group. Diabetologia.
2001442203 - Type of Diabetic Treatment Giuffre G, et al.
Prevalence and risk factors of diabetic
retinopathy in adult and elderly subjectsThe
Casteldaccia Eye Study. Graefes Arch Clin Exp
Ophthalmol. 2004 Feb 18 - Age, Puberty, Obesity (in Type 2 DM), Ballard
DJ, et al. Risk factors for diabetic
retinopathya population-based study in
Rochester, Minnesota. Diabetes Care. 19869334 - Blood Pressure, Pregnancy Neely KA, et al
Diabetic Retinopathy. Med Clin N Amer, 199882847
25Diabetes Control Complications TrialRetinopathy
risk is not completely explained by HbA1c
26The Barbara Davis Experience withNon-dilated
Imaging in Type 1 DM
- 1999-2004
- Nearly 4,000 non-dilated retinal images captured
in 632 patients
27Methods
- Non-Mydriatic Retinal Camera CR6-45NM
- Three-field fundus photography
- Modified Airlie-House Grading System
- Images captured by a technician and graded by an
Ophthalmologist
28Methods
- Additional data
- age, sex, duration of diabetes, current HbA1C
- blood pressure, serum creatinine, AER
- lipids (LDL, HDL, triglycerides), obesity (BMI)
- smoking, pregnancy, medications
29Initial Results (N632)
Grade patients
Age yr
Duration yr
A1c
Smokers
20.4
7.5
8.9
12.8
1 (68)
2 (16)
26.3
14.1
9.0
16.5
3 (6)
27.6
15.2
8.7
20.7
34.3
19.1
9.3
18.5
4 (5)
29.8
20.8
9.0
0
5 (1)
35.7
25.0
9.0
19.0
6 (4)
30Summary of Results
- Older age was significantly associated with
higher DR grade (ANOVA, plt0.0001) - Longer duration of diabetes was significantly
associated with higher DR grade (plt0.0001) - Current HbA1c was not associated with DR grade
(p0.9) - Smoking was not associated with DR grade
31Discussion
- As expected, age and duration were associated
with DR - Current HbA1c and smoking may not reflect
cumulative long-term effect of these exposures - The next step in these analyses will include
prospective evaluation of these and additional
risk factors
32Its About Time
- We are all on the diabetic blindness prevention
team - Coordinate and Cure