emerging trends in diabetes and diabetic retinopathy anthony cavallerano, od, faao va boston health...

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Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston, Massachusetts [email protected] University of Milan June 2007

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Page 1: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy

Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAOVA Boston Health Care System

New England College of OptometryBoston, Massachusetts

[email protected]

University of Milan

June 2007

Page 2: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Scope of the Problem

• Total: 20.8 million children and adults -- 7.0% of the population -- have diabetes.

• 10.3 million over age 60• Diagnosed: 14.6 million people• Undiagnosed: 6.2 million people• Pre-diabetes: 41 million people• 1.5 million new cases of diabetes were

diagnosed in people aged 20 years or older in 2005.

Page 3: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

0

4

8

12

1980 1990 2000 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2006.

Dia

gn

ose

d C

ases

(M

illio

ns)

+17%

+60%

• 14 million diagnosed + 6.8 million undiagnosed • Type 2 diabetes accounts for 90-95% of cases

Diabetes: 20.8 Million and Diabetes: 20.8 Million and ClimbingClimbing

Page 4: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

                      May 16, 2006    

Page 5: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Study CLCase Study CL

Page 6: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Studies - Patient CL

• 47-year-old female

• Type 1 DM x 26 years

• LEE - 6 months ago (undilated)

• Dilated retinal examination 2 years ago

• POHx – “mild retinopathy”

• No ocular or visual complaints

Page 7: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Studies - Patient CL

• VA = 20/20 OD, 20/30 OS

• Sensorimotor examination intact

• SLE – early cataract OD

• No evidence of NVI

Page 8: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Retinal Signs of HypoxiaRetinal Signs of Hypoxia• Cotton wool spots – 1/1 correlation with retinal

ischemia• Venous caliber abnormalities (VCAB)

– Change in course/dimension/direction of vessel– Venous beading

• Venous tortuosity• Intraretinal microvascular abnormalities

(IRMA) – 70% of NV occurs in areas of IRMA• Featureless retina

Page 9: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Diabetic RetinopathyDiabetic Retinopathy

Reduced retinal blood flow Closure of retinal capillaries and arterioles Ischemia/Cotton-wool spots Breakdown of the blood/retinal barrier with increased

vascular permeability of retinal capillaries Intraretinal microvascular abnormalities (IRMA) also found

adjacent to areas of capillary closure 70% of NVE occurs in same area as IRMA Proliferation of new vessels and fibrous tissue Contraction of vitreous and fibrous proliferation with VH

and RD

Features

Page 10: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

CL - Notes• Little or no obvious NPDR on first glance• No ocular or visual complaints• Last exam 6 months ago/last dilated eye exam 2 years• High risk PDR and early DME• Three diagnoses

– NPDR– PDR– DME

• Clinical pearls– Few HMa’s is not always reassuring– Superior temporal quadrant

Page 11: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Diabetes Care TeamDiabetes Care Team

PCP/ Internist/ EndocrinologistPCP/ Internist/ Endocrinologist Optometrist/ophthalmologist/retinologistOptometrist/ophthalmologist/retinologist NephrologistNephrologist NeurologistNeurologist PodiatristPodiatrist Mental health professionalMental health professional Exercise PhysiologistExercise Physiologist Dietician/nutritionistDietician/nutritionist Diabetes educatorDiabetes educator

PATIENTPATIENT

Page 12: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Intervention Demonstrated Efficacy to Delay/Prevent

Retinopathy Nephropathy Neuropathy

Glucose Control + + +BP Control + +ACE Inhibitors ?+ +LDL Control ? ? ?Aspirin NoSmoking Cessation

? ? ?

Current Therapies for Microvascular Complications

Page 13: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

DCCT Evaluating

Type 1 Diabetes:

Intensive Blood Glucose Control

vs.

Standard Blood Glucose Control

Page 14: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

14*After 6.5 years

Intervention Studies: Glycemic Control

DCCT*(Type 1 diabetes)

Adapted from DCCT Research Group. N Engl J Med. 1993;329:977-986.

N = 1,441 patients

10

8

6

0

9.1

P < 0.001

7.2 Conventional therapy

Intensive therapy

Mean

HbA 1c

(%)

Page 15: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

15

*Compared with conventional treatment†Urinary albumin excretion 300 mg/24 h

DCCT: Intensive Glucose Control in Type 1 diabetes mellitus

Compared to conventional insulin therapy, intensive insulin therapy reduced the risk of development and progression of:

Risk Reduction*

Retinopathy 63%

Nephropathy† 54%

Neuropathy 60%

Adapted from DCCT Research Group. N Engl J Med. 1993;329:977-986.

Page 16: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

UKPDS Evaluating

Type 2 Diabetes:

Intensive Blood Glucose Control

vs.

Standard Blood Glucose Control

similar results to DCCT

Page 17: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

• A 20-year, multicenter, prospective, randomized, interventional trial

• Recruited 5102 newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes patients – 40% with DR

• Mean duration from randomization: 11 years

• Randomized to intensive glucose control vs. conventional control

UKPDS: Study Overview

Page 18: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

• Glycemic control deteriorated with time regardless of initial therapy

• Intensive glycemic control reduced HbA1c by 0.9% over 10 years, with resulting decrease in clinical complications

UKPDS: Intensive Glucose Control in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

*Compared with conventional therapy †At 12 years

Microvascular disease Retinopathy progression†

Microalbuminuria†

Myocardial infarction

Risk reduction*

25%21%

33%

16%

Page 19: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Role of Hypertension in DR

• Impairs retinal vascular autoregulation

• Promotes endothelial damage in retinal vasculature

• Increases expression of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factors (VEGF) and its receptors by vascular stretch of retinal endothelium

Page 20: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Role of Renal Disease in DME

• Gross proteinuria associated with 95% increased risk of DME (WESDR)

• Case reports of reduction of diabetic macular edema after dialysis

• Type 1 DM patients with microalbuminuria have three-fold risk of PDR compared to those with normal levels

Page 21: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Diabetic Nephropathy

• DM accounts for 30 – 40% of ESRD in the US• More common in Type 2 DM• Rarely develops in Type 1 DM before 10 years• 3% of Type 2 patients have nephropathy at the time

of diagnosis– Incidence is 3%/year– Peak incidence is DM of 10 – 20 years duration

Page 22: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Role of Serum Lipids in DR

• Elevated serum lipids are associated with increased risk of retinal hard exudates

• Increased amounts of hard exudates are associated with increased risk of visual impairment

• Elevated lipids, most notably triglycerides, are a risk factor for development of high-risk PDR

ETDRS Report # 18 and 22

Page 23: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Metabolic Syndrome

• Defined by the National Cholesterol Education Program. The presence of any three of the following conditions:

• Excess weight around the waist (waist measurement of more than 40 inches for men and more than 35 inches for women)

• High levels of triglycerides (150 mg/dL or higher)• Low levels of HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL for

men and below 50 mg/dL for women)• High blood pressure (130/85 mm Hg or higher)• High fasting blood glucose levels (110 mg/dL or

higher)

Page 24: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

The Metabolic SyndromeThe Metabolic SyndromeDiagnosis is established when 3 of these risk factors are present.

Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults. JAMA 2001;285:2486-2497.

Risk Factor Defining LevelAbdominal obesity(Waist circumference)

Men Women

>102 cm (>40 in)>88 cm (>35 in)

TG 150 mg/dL

HDL-C

Men Women

<40 mg/dL<50 mg/dL

Blood pressure 130/85 mm Hg

Fasting glucose 110 mg/dL

Page 25: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Prevalence of the Metabolic Syndrome Among US Adults

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70

Age (y)

Men

Women

Pre

vale

nc

e (

%)

Ford et al. JAMA. 2002;287:356.

Page 26: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Pathogenesis of Type 2 Diabetes

Insulin Resistance

Insulin Resistance and Hyperinsulinemia With

Normal Glucose Tolerance

Insulin Resistance and Declining Insulin Levels With Impaired Glucose

Tolerance

Type 2 Diabetes

Impaired -Cell Function

Adapted from Saltiel A, Olefsky JM. Diabetes. 1996;45:1661-1669.

Page 27: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Criteria for Diagnosis

American Diabetes Association. Diabetes Care. 2003;26(suppl 1):S5-S20

FPG 2-h PPG (OGTT)

126 110

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Plasma glucose(mg/dL)

Normal

Diabetes Mellitus

240

220

Diabetes Mellitus

Normal

IGT

IFG

Page 28: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Risk Factors for Prediabetes

• Age– 45 years or older– Younger than 45, overweight, and have one or more

of the following risk factors:• Family history of diabetes • Low HDL cholesterol and high triglycerides• Hypertension • History of gestational diabetes or gave birth to a baby

weighing more than 9 pounds• Minority group background

– African American– American Indian, Hispanic American/Latino– Asian American/Pacific Islander)

Page 29: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

EXUBERA• Pfizer’s first FDA approved insulin inhaler

• Complementary to oral hypoglycemic agents

• Rapid-acting dry powder human insulin

• Inhaled into the mouth in powder form prior to eating

Page 30: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Januvia (sitagliptin phosphate)• Merck’s new entry into oral medications• Once per day dosage• Januvia prolongs the activity of proteins that

boost the release of insulin after blood sugar rises

• Januvia blocks the enzyme DPP-IV, (dipeptidyl peptidase-4) which breaks down these proteins.

• By sidelining that enzyme, Januvia lets those insulin-boosting proteins last longer, leading to better blood sugar control

• Side effects: URI, sore throat, diarrhea

Page 31: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Acomplia (rimonabant)• Sanofi-Aventis' obesity drug• 278 patients

– type 2 diabetes – not currently taking oral hypoglycemic agents

• QD dosage • Study results

– Those with A1c of 7.9% - lower by 0.8%– Those with A1c of >8.5% - lower by 1.9%– Average weight loss – 15lbs

• Reduced abdominal dimension by more than 6cm• Side effects Stock went up

– Dizziness, nausea, anxiety, depressed mood and headache (9% of study participants)

Page 32: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Pioglitazone/Rosiglitazone• Enhance insulin-mediated glucose disposal by

muscle, thereby decreasing insulin resistance• Rosiglitazone decreased risk of type 2 DM by

62% (DREAM Trial 2006)

• Associated with development of DME (risk—1/10,000)

• Rapid reduction of macular edema and peripheral edema with drug cessation

• Enhances the action of platinum-based cancer drugs and may reduce the risk for lung cancer

• May increase the risk for cardiac events

Ryan EH et al. Retina 2006; Kendall C et al. CMAJ 2006

Page 33: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Role of Protein Kinase C Activation in the Retinal

VasculatureIncreases:

– Basement matrix protein synthesis – Activation of leukocytes – Endothelial cell activation and proliferation– Smooth muscle cell contraction– Cytokine activation, TGF-, VEGF, endothelin– Angiogenesis– Endothelial permeability

Page 34: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

The effect of ruboxistaurin (Arxxant) on visual loss in patients with moderately severe to very severe nonproliferative

diabetic retinopathy: Results of the Protein Kinase C beta Inhibitor Diabetic

Retinopathy Study (PKC-DRS) multicenter randomized clinical trial.

Diabetes. 2005 Jul;54(7):2188-97 .

Page 35: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

PKC Beta Inhibitor Trials – Ruboxistaurin

20%

40%

0%

50%

EventRate

10 2 3

30%

10%

Placebo32 mg

Years

P = 0.019

Development of Moderate Vision Loss

Page 36: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Sustained* Losses in Visual Acuity

29.4%

20.9%

15.7%

10.9% 10.2%

6.1%

P=0.002

P=0.020

P=0.011

ETDRS Letters Lost

% o

f P

atie

nts

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

≥5 ≥15 (SMVL)≥10

Placebo (N=401 pt)

RBX 32 mg/d

(N=412 pt)

*Sustained for months 30-36, or for the last 6 months on study, for patients who discontinued early

Data from integrated analysis

Page 37: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Diabetes: A Systemic Disease

DiabeticRetinopathy

Leading causeof blindness

in working ageadults

DiabeticNephropathy

Leading cause of end-stage renal disease

CardiovascularDisease

DiabeticNeuropathy

Stroke

Leading cause of non-traumatic lower extremity amputations

2- to 4- fold increase in cardiovascular mortality and stroke

National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse. Diabetes StatisticsNational Diabetes Information Clearinghouse. Diabetes Statistics––Complications of Diabetes. (website) Complications of Diabetes. (website) http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/diabetes/pubs/dmstats/dmstats.htm#comp.http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/diabetes/pubs/dmstats/dmstats.htm#comp.

Page 38: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Vision Loss From Diabetes

• Diabetic macular edema

• Vitreous hemorrhage

• Tractional retinal detachment

• Neovascular glaucoma

Page 39: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Diabetic Retinopathy Prevalence

Wisconsin Epidemilogic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy (WESDR)

Type 1 DM (onset < 30 yrs)

13% < 5-yr-duration90% 10-15-yr-duration

Type 2 DM (onset > 30 yrs)

40% taking insulin < 5-yr-duration24% not taking insulin < 5-yr-duration84% taking insulin 15-20-yr-duration 53% not taking insulin 15-20-yr- duration

UKPDS:

~ 40% with DR

at entrance into study

Page 40: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

DME after 15 years of DM

• Type 1 20%

• Type 2 (insulin) 25%

 

• Type 2 (no insulin) 14%

WESDR 1984

Page 41: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Presentation - SC

• 20-year-old female

• College freshman

• Type 1 DM 5.5 yrs

• Insulin: t.i.d., antidepressants, ACE-inhibitor

• c/o fluctuating vision

• SMBG 3-4 x day; Average ~ 300 mg/dL

Page 42: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Presentation - SC

• Recent HbA1c = 15.6%

(20 x 15.6) + 30 = 342

• Borderline HT; microalbuminuria

• Total cholesterol 202 mg/dL

Page 43: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Presentation - SC Exam Findings

• VA/Ref:– Cc (14 mos.): -1.50 sphere OU; 20/40-2 OD/OS– Refraction: -2.25 sphere OU; 20/20-2 OD/OS

• Sensorimotor exam normal

• Amsler grid: no distortion OD/OS

• IOP: 20 mm Hg OD/OS

• Cortical cataract OU, early PSC OD

• No evidence of NVI OD/OS

Page 44: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Hard exudate within 1 DD of center of maculaMild H/Ma in midperiphery and posterior pole

Mild to Moderate NPDR

Macular Edema Not CSME

Treatment Plan

No eye treatment indicated

Control DM and medical cx

Return 3 - 4 months

Page 45: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Presentation - SCPatient returned in six months• VA/Ref: -1.50 sphere OU;20/40-2 OD/OS• No progression of cataract• No evidence of NVIAdditional medical history • HbA1c = 6.4%• Self-reported physical hx: Neg• + ACE Inhibitor• + bulimia nervosa

Page 46: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Presentation - SC

Treatment • Focal and scatter laser treatment stat OD• Focal Laser OS • PRP x 3 OD over 2.5 mo• PRP x 4 OS over 2.5 mo

• Report/discussion with patient and endocrinologist

Page 47: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Study AL

Page 48: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Studies - Patient AL

• 36-year-old male • Type 1 DM 25 yrs• LEE 2–3 yrs• PMHx: mitral valve stenosis,valve

replacement• FOHx: glaucoma (grandmother)• Recent HbA1c = 7.0%• Insulin, Lasix, coumadin, vitamins A,C,D,

zinc, calcium

Page 49: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Study AL

• VA 20/20 OU

• Sensorimotor exam normal

• Amsler grid: no distortion OU

• IOP 17mmHg OU

Page 50: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Case Study AL

Treatment Plan

• Follow-up in 3 months

• Referral for cardiovascular/carotid evaluation

• Hypertension control

Page 51: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

ETDRS

(5)(12)

(27)

(50)

0102030

40506070

Percent

Mild Mod Mod Sev

Baseline Level

PDR at 1-year Visit By Severity of Retinopathy

Page 52: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Retinal Emboli Cholesterol - sparkling yellow/ glistening –

typically at an arterial bifurcation (carotid artery disease)

Calcium – dull, fluffy, chalky white – around disc (cardiac disease)

Cardiac myxoma - seen in young patients, typically in the left eye – often occludes ophthalmic or central retinal arteries

Talc or cornstarch – i.v. drug abuse

Page 53: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Notes - ALInitially does not appear to be severe NPDRIschemia noted particularly in midperipheryRetinal embolus indicating significant risk for

cardiovascular diseaseIncreased association of ocular and systemic

vascular anomalies in patients with DMOther vascular disorders influence the

development and rate of progression of DR

Page 54: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Yesterday/Today: Therapy for Diabetic Retinopathy

• Laser Surgery/Pars Plana Vitrectomy (ETDRS)

• Intensive glycemic control (DCCT/EDIC, UKPDS)

• Control of concurrent systemic disorders– Hypertension (UKPDS, EUCLID)

– Hyperlipidemia (ETDRS)

– Abdominal Obesity (Eurodiab)

– Anemia (ETDRS)

Page 55: Emerging Trends in Diabetes and Diabetic Retinopathy Anthony Cavallerano, OD, FAAO VA Boston Health Care System New England College of Optometry Boston,

Future ImplicationsFuture Implications

• Eventual move beyond an era of common pathway late-stage complication-oriented therapy

• Move toward earlier therapies targeted to specific molecules mediating disease-specific and/or risk- factor-specific interactions

• Therapies targeted to specific individuals