Diabetic Macular Edema Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study of Laser Photocoagulation for Diabetic Macular Edema
This pilot study will compare the use of current laser treatment for diabetic macular edema with a similar laser treatment that is milder in intensity, but more extensive.
Diabetic retinopathy is a disorder of major public health importance, accounting for the
majority of visual loss among working age Americans. Diabetic macular edema (DME) is a
manifestation of diabetic retinopathy that produces loss of central vision. Data from the
Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy (WESDR) estimate that after 15 years
of known diabetes, the prevalence of diabetic macular edema is approximately 20 percent in
patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM), 25 in patients with type 2 DM who are taking
insulin, and 14 percent in patients with type 2 DM who do not take insulin. The Early
Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) showed that moderate vision loss, defined as a
doubling of the visual angle (e.g., 20/20 reduced to 20/40), can be reduced by 50 percent or
more by focal/grid laser photocoagulation according to ETDRS protocol. Although several
treatment modalities are currently under investigation, the only demonstrated means to
reduce the risk of vision loss from diabetic macular edema are ETDRS laser photocoagulation,
as demonstrated by the ETDRS, and intensive glycemic control, as demonstrated by the
Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) and the United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes
Study (UKPDS). In the DCCT, intensive glucose control reduced the risk of onset of diabetic
macular edema by 23 percent compared with conventional treatment. Long-term follow-up of
patients in the DCCT show a sustained effect of intensive glucose control, with a 58 percent
risk reduction in the development of diabetic macular edema for the DCCT patients followed
in the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications Study.
In brief, the study protocol involves the enrollment of patients >18 years of age who have
DME involving or threatening the center of the macula and who have not had prior focal/grid
laser photocoagulation for DME. These are patients for whom the standard of care would be to
treat with laser photocoagulation. Eligible eyes will be randomly assigned to receive either
the modified-ETDRS technique or the mild macular grid (MMG) technique. Outcome assessments
will include Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), fundus photography, fluorescein angiography
and standardized best-corrected visual acuity.
The study consists of two phases: Phase 1 (the primary study), which consists of the first
12 months of follow up, during which a structured protocol is followed; and Phase 2, which
consists of the second and third years of follow up, during which the management of DME can
include techniques other than laser photocoagulation, at discretion of the investigator.
During Phase 1, follow-up visits will occur at 15 weeks (3.5 months) +14 days, 34 weeks (8
months) + 28 days, and 52 weeks (12 months) + 28 days. The primary outcome for phase 1 is at
12 months.
The primary study objectives of Phase 1 include:
- Develop standardized study procedures for future DME studies
- Obtain outcome data (e.g. changes in retinal thickness, area of retinal thickening,
area of hard exudate, need for retreatment, onset of new areas of DME and changes in
visual acuity) following use of the modified-ETDRS photocoagulation technique for
patients with DME and various levels of retinopathy severity.
- Collect pilot data using the MMG technique to determine whether a subsequent large
scale definitive trial should be conducted
Phase 2 (2nd and 3rd years of follow up) is being conducted to collect data on, and generate
hypotheses from, the long-term outcome of DME, irrespective of treatment received. Protocol
visits will occur at 2 years + 8 weeks and 3 years + 8 weeks. During this phase of the
study, therapies other than laser photocoagulation may be used to treat DME at the
investigator's discretion. Because treatment other than photocoagulation will be allowed
after one year, 'pure' results regarding outcomes with each laser technique cannot be
obtained in all groups, but will be available in a subset of patients. The data are being
collected at relatively low cost and no risk over and above usual care. Therefore, the
collection of potentially hypothesis-generating data from exploratory analysis is justified
and could be important in designing future studies. Interpretation of the results of the
above analyses will be complicated by the lack of a standardized protocol with regard to
which patients receive treatment and what treatment is provided. Therefore, the results will
be interpreted with caution.
The phase 2 data collection may be useful for the following:
- Evaluation of retreatment rates in patients who responded to laser such that no
additional treatment was required at 12 months. This is a long term analysis on a
"pure" group of patients and will provide important information on the DME recurrence
rate and need for retreatment in study eyes of those patients whose DME improved with
either of the two protocol-specified treatments received in Phase 1 such that further
treatment was not necessary at the 12-month visit.
- Provide long-term safety data for MMG. This is important due to the less well studied
nature of MMG, especially over the long term.
- Provide long-term outcome data on current standard treatment (modified ETDRS laser) in
today's patient populations to assist in powering future studies that will require at
least 3 years of follow up.
- Provide data on outcome of intravitreal steroids in patients in whom laser treatment is
not successful. For many patients who still have DME at 12 months, it is anticipated
that intravitreal steroids will be administered. The continued follow up of these
patients will provide an opportunity to explore the effect of the steroids on retinal
thickness and visual acuity.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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