Diabetic Macular Edema Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ranibizumab (rhuFab V2) and Scatter Laser Photocoagulation in Treatment of Patients With Clinically-significant Diabetic Macular Edema With Peripheral Retinal Nonperfusion (RaScaL)
To investigate the role of ranibizumab and angiographically-directed peripheral scatter
laser therapy in patients with clinically-significant diabetic macular edema (CSME) and
peripheral nonperfusion. We propose a novel treatment of CSME in a subgroup of patients
defined by a combination of ultrawide-field angiography (UWFA) and optical coherence
tomography (OCT). Within this classification scheme, patients with CSME are subdivided by
the presence of: 1) focal macular leakage, 2) vitreomacular interface traction, and/or 3)
peripheral nonperfusion. The successful treatment of diabetic macular edema would be
dictated by pathophysiology-directed therapy based on this classification.
The subgroup of interest for this clinical trial is characterized by diabetic macular edema,
peripheral nonperfusion on UWFA, and the absence of macular traction on OCT. This group of
patients has previously not been well recognized or characterized due to limitations in
previous, standard angiographic evaluation of the retinal periphery.
We postulate that this subcategory represents one with a high rate of failure of accepted
therapies given persistence of the basic pathophysiologic mechanism for CSME, namely
ischemia-induced production of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) from the retinal
periphery. This also represents a population of patients with likely recurrence of CSME
despite treatment with anti-VEGF therapy alone for the same reason.
Diabetic retinopathy is a leading cause of moderate and severe visual loss in developed
countries. It is of paramount socioeconomic impact as the prevalence of diabetes is sharply
increasing, diabetic macular edema is the leading cause of vision loss in working age
patients, it is a significant cause of vision loss in patients older than 65 years of age,
it frequently affects patients bilaterally, and the costs of therapy are increasing.
Diabetic macular edema (DME) is the most common cause of vision loss in diabetic
retinopathy. The pathophysiology of DME is complex and multifactorial. Chronic
hyperglycemia, protein kinase C (PKC) formation, free radical accumulation, advanced
glycation end-product (AGE) proteins, and ischemia-driven release of vascular endothelial
growth factor (VEGF) are some of the better understood factors that contribute to chronic
retinal arterial and capillary damage and increased permeability.
The RIDE and RISE Studies demonstrated the superiority of anti-VEGF monotherapy with
ranibizumab over sham therapy, when all groups were allowed to receive macular laser therapy
after month 3 based on predefined criteria. Furthermore, other studies have demonstrated
VEGF inhibitors to be beneficial for DME, either as monotherapy or in combination with
macular laser.
The benefit of VEGF antagonists in treating DME validates that the VEGF pathway is a key
target. The need for repeated anti-VEGF injections to maintain the benefit of treatment begs
the question whether persistent peripheral retinal ischemia may be driving VEGF production
in at least a subset of patients with DME. Fluorescein angiographic studies of the mid- and
far-periphery of diabetic patients by Shimizu in the 1980's demonstrated areas of peripheral
retinal nonperfusion in diabetic patients. These findings have been reproduced and
substantiated more recently utilizing a novel, commercially-available imaging system for
ultrawide-field angiography (UWFA) that employs a scanning laser ophthalmoscope and an
ellipsoidal mirror.
We investigated whether patients with diabetic macular edema associated with peripheral
nonperfusion on UWFA would have improved visual acuity, resolution of retinal thickening on
OCT, and durability of therapy using a novel strategy of a single intravitreal injection of
Ranibizumab, a VEGF-A inhibitor + UWFA-guided peripheral Scatter Laser, or RaScaL. A second
goal of the study was to guide DME treatment by the imaging signature of UWFA and OCT.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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