| Literature DB >> 25586713 |
Sian Taylor-Phillips1, Hema Mistry1, Rachael Leslie1, Dan Todkill1, Alexander Tsertsvadze1, Martin Connock1, Aileen Clarke1.
Abstract
To determine whether the recommended screening interval for diabetic retinopathy (DR) in the UK can safely be extended beyond 1 year. Systematic review of clinical and cost-effectiveness studies. Nine databases were searched with no date restrictions. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cohort studies, prognostic or economic modelling studies which described the incidence and progression of DR in populations with type 1 diabetes mellitus or type 2 diabetes mellitus of either sex and of any age reporting incidence and progression of DR in relation to screening interval (vs annual screening interval) and/or prognostic factors were included. Narrative synthesis was undertaken. 14,013 papers were identified, of which 11 observational studies, 5 risk stratification modelling studies and 9 economic studies were included. Data were available for 262,541 patients of whom at least 228,649 (87%) had type 2 diabetes. There were no RCTs. Studies concluded that there is little difference between clinical outcomes from screening 1 yearly or 2 yearly in low-risk patients. However there was high loss to follow-up (13-31%), heterogeneity in definitions of low risk and variation in screening and grading protocols for prior retinopathy results. Observational and economic modelling studies in low-risk patients show little difference in clinical outcomes between 1-year and 2-year screening intervals. The lack of experimental research designs and heterogeneity in definition of low risk considerably limits the reliability and validity of this conclusion. Cost-effectiveness findings were mixed. There is insufficient evidence to recommend a move to extend the screening interval beyond 1 year. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes Mellitus; Diabetic Retinopathy; Mass Screening; Screening Interval; Systematic Review
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25586713 PMCID: PMC4717369 DOI: 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2014-305938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Ophthalmol ISSN: 0007-1161 Impact factor: 4.638
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of systematic review.
Differences in screening and grading protocols for detecting diabetic retinopathy
| Was mydriasis used? | How many and which retinal fields were taken? | Photographs or digital retinal photographs | Which cameras were used? | Were patients tested using slit lamp (biomicroscopy) | What grading protocol was used? | Were screeners and graders trained and/or accredited? | Was grading quality assured?/ Was grading assessed elsewhere? | How many times were images graded? | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agardh and Tababat-Khani | No information | One central and one nasal 50° field per eye. | Red free digital images | No information | No information | International Diabetic Retinopathy and Macula Edema Severity Scales | Performed by specially trained ophthalmic nurses | No information | No information |
| Jones | Both pupils were dilated with 1% tropicamide drops | Two photographs of each eye were taken, one centred on the optic nerve and the other on the fovea. | Mixed | Mobile retinal cameras: Canon 45NM or 46NM fundus cameras (Canon UK, Reigate, UK) with 458 fields and Orion Eyecap and DRSS digital imaging software. | No information | 1990–2002: Descriptive grading system based on European guidelines | Before 2000: diabetologist with a specialist interest in retinopathy | Yes. Nationally accredited arbitration grader | No information |
| Kohner | Yes | Four-field 30° retinal photographs taken as stereo pairs | No information | No information | No information | Allocated to a retinopathy severity level using the Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) final scale, modified for four standard fields. | No information | Only patients with a set of good quality images of both eyes were included in the study. | No information |
| Kristinsson | Yes | No information | No information | No information | Yes | No information | No information | No information | No information |
| Looker | If required | Single field | Digital photograph | No information | Slit lamp outcomes were not available for all patients, but where available, results were used. | Scottish grading system | No information | No information | No information |
| Maguire | Yes—1% cyclopentolate and 2.5% phenylephrine | Stereoscopic fundal photography of seven fields. Non-simultaneous photographic pairs for each eye | Viewed with a Donaldson Stereoviewer providing a 3D representation of the fundus. | Topcon fundus camera | Yes. Slit lamp examination of the anterior segment. | ETDRS adaption of the modified Ailie House classification of diabetic retinopathy. | Graded by an ophthalmologist with a large sample graded by a second grader independently. | When necessary, a grading supervisor was used to adjudicate. Agreement between two graders was statistically assessed. | No information |
| Misra | As Jones | ||||||||
| Olafsdóttir and Stefánsson | Yes | Colour photographs taken with a 90-diopter lens | Yes | Visual acuity reported by the better eye. | Screened by an ophthalmologist | ||||
| Soto-Pedre | No Information | One fundus photograph centred on the macula of each eye taken with 45° non-mydriatic retinal camera | Instant film Polaroid | Canon CR4-45NM | No | International Diabetic Retinopathy and Macula Edema Severity Scales. | Stored polaroid photographs were graded by the same retina specialist for this study. | No | Once for the purpose of this retrospective study |
| Stratton | Yes | Two standard 45 fields—Macular and disc centred—per eye | Digital colour retinal photographs | No information | No information | Grading based on the ETDRS severity scale | Trained assessors in a central location to the screening venues | Internal and external quality-assured reading process that reaches national recommendations. | No information |
| Thomas | Tropicamide (applied to each eye 15 min before screening | Two 45° digital retinal images per eye—one macular centred and one nasal field | Non-mydriatic Canon DGi camera | Screening undertaken by a trained photographer | Before screening, a trained healthcare assistant assesses visual acuity in both eyes using an illuminated 3 m Snellen chart | Retinal images transferred to a central reading centre for grading | |||
| Younis | 1% tropicamide with or without phenylephrine | Three overlapping non-stereoscopic 33 mm transparency photographs of each eye | Either Canon CR4-45NM with 45° fields or a Topcon TRC 50 SX camera with 50° fields. | No information | Patients with ungradable images or STDR invited for slit lamp biomicroscopy by specialists in medical retinal disease. | STDR defined as moderate preproliferative retinopathy or greater and/or significant maculopathy in any eye. | No information | No information | No information |
| Younis | As Younis 2003b | ||||||||
NSC, National Screening Committee; MA, microaneurysms; STDR, sight threatening diabetic retinopathy.
Characteristics and findings of cost-effectiveness studies investigating different DR screening intervals
| Author (year) | Type of economic evaluation and model | Population studied | Comparators | Methods (perspective, time horizon and discount rate) | Methods (costs, outcomes, ICER and sensitivity analyses) | Results and main conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brailsford | EE: CEA | Hypothetical population of 100 000 people with T2DM | Two screening policies using different strategies vs no screening: | Study perspective: Not stated | Outcomes: Total number of years of sight saved | Most cost-effective screening policy is where the optometrist carries out both screens (policy 2) and if screen 2 is positive this is confirmed by the gold standard test. Screening should be carried out at 30 month intervals. |
| Chalk | EE: CEA | Hypothetical population of 5000 people with T2DM without DR | Annual (or 6-monthly) screening vs a 2-year screening programme | Study perspective: Not stated | Outcomes: Proportion of patients with diabetes with vision loss | The 2-year screening costs were £1 360 516 and annual screening costs were £1 834 060, which represents a 25.8% reduction in screening costs. A screening test every 2 years was a safe and cost-effective strategy. |
| Dasbach | EE: CEA | Hypothetical groups of a 1000 patients with onset diabetes: | Seven screening strategies: | Study perspective: Societal | Outcomes: Sight years saved | 60-year results: annual examination with mydriatic fundus photography for groups 1, 2 and 3 might save from 303 to 319, from 58 to 62 and from 19 to 21 sight years, respectively. |
| Davies | EE: CEA | Hypothetical population of 500 000 people with T1DM or T2DM who could develop DR | Each scenario compared with no screening. Screening done by a mobile camera, diabetologist, optometrist or GP. | Study perspective: Not stated | Outcomes: Average years of sight saved | For both types of patients, the mobile camera (Policy 2) had the lowest costs at £449 200 per year and a cost per sight year saved of £2842. |
| Javitt | EE: CEA | Hypothetical cohort of patients with T1DM | Five screening strategies all have dilated ophthalmoscopy: | Study perspective: Government | Outcomes: Person years of sight saved | All strategies resulted in cost savings. |
| Javitt | EE: CEA | Hypothetical cohort of patients with T2DM with DR | Eight screening strategies: | Study perspective: Government | Outcomes: Person years of sight saved | Changing the frequency of screening for patients with no or mild background DR from 1 year to 2 years has no detrimental effect on years of sight saved while reducing costs. |
| Rein | EE: CUA | Hypothetical 10 million patients with T2DM with no or early DR | Four screening methods: | Study perspective: Societal | Outcomes: QALYs | Current annual eye evaluation was costly compared with either treatment alternative. |
| Tung | EE: CEA and CUA | Community-based patients with T2DM | Five screening strategies compared with no screening: | Study perspective: Not stated | Outcomes: Sight years saved and QALYs | Annual screening should be conducted. |
| Vijan | EE: CUA | Hypothetical T2DM patients | Four screening strategies compared with no screening: | Study perspective: Third party payer (government and societal used in sensitivity analyses) | Outcomes: QALYs | Screening every other year maybe the most cost-effective option. with the option of tailoring screening to the needs of different individuals. |
CEA, cost-effectiveness analysis; CUA, cost-utility analysis; DR, diabetic retinopathy; EE, economic evaluation; GP, General Practitioner; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; POST, Patient Orientated Simulation Technique; PROPHET, PROspective Population Health Event Tabulation; QALY, quality-adjusted life year; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus.