| Literature DB >> 28539797 |
Rohit Saxena1, Digvijay Singh2, Ravi Saklani3, Suresh Kumar Gupta3.
Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy is a highly specific microvascular complication of diabetes and a leading cause of blindness worldwide. It is triggered by hyperglycemia which causes increased oxidative stress leading to an adaptive inflammatory assault to the neuroretinal tissue and microvasculature. Prolonged hyperglycemia causes increased polyol pathway flux, increased formation of advanced glycation end-products, abnormal activation of signaling cascades such as activation of protein kinase C (PKC) pathway, increased hexosamine pathway flux, and peripheral nerve damage. All these changes lead to increased oxidative stress and inflammatory assault to the retina resulting in structural and functional changes. In addition, neuroretinal alterations affect diabetes progression. The most effective way to manage diabetic retinopathy is by primary prevention such as hyperglycemia control. While the current mainstay for the management of severe and proliferative diabetic retinopathy is laser photocoagulation, its role is diminishing with the development of newer drugs including corticosteroids, antioxidants, and antiangiogenic and anti-VEGF agents which work as an adjunct to laser therapy or independently. The current pharmacotherapy of diabetic retinopathy is incomplete as a sole treatment option in view of limited efficacy and short-term effect. There is a definite clinical need to develop new pharmacological therapies for diabetic retinopathy, particularly ones which would be effective through the oral route and help recover lost vision. The increasing understanding of the mechanisms of diabetic retinopathy and its biomarkers is likely to help generate better and more effective medications.Entities:
Keywords: laser; mechanism; neurodegeneration; pharmacotherapy microvascular changes; progression
Year: 2016 PMID: 28539797 PMCID: PMC5398738 DOI: 10.2147/EB.S69185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye Brain ISSN: 1179-2744
International DR disease severity scale and recommended management strategies146,147
| Disease severity level | Signs | Management options |
|---|---|---|
| No apparent retinopathy | No abnormalities. | Optimize medical therapy of glucose, blood pressure, and lipids. |
| Minimal NPDR | Microaneurysms only. | Optimize medical therapy of glucose, blood pressure, and lipids. |
| Mild-to-moderate NPDR | More than just microaneurysms but less than severe NPDR. | Optimize medical therapy of glucose, blood pressure, and lipids and ophthalmology referral. |
| Severe NPDR | Any of the following: more than 20 intraretinal hemorrhages in each of four quadrants; definite venous beading in two or more quadrants; and prominent intraretinal microvascular abnormalities in one or more quadrants and no signs of proliferative retinopathy. | Consider scatter (panretinal) laser treatment for patients with type 2 diabetes. |
| PDR | One of the following: neovascularization or vitreous/preretinal hemorrhage. | Strongly consider scatter (panretinal) laser treatment, without delay for patients with vitreous hemorrhage or neovascularization within one disc diameter of the optic nerve head. |
| Absent | No retinal thickening or hard exudates in posterior pole. | Laser treatment for PDR and center not involving DME. |
| Present | Mild – some retinal thickening or hard exudates in posterior pole but distant from the macula. | Intravitreal drug administration for center involving DME and eventual additional later laser treatment. |
Abbreviations: DME, diabetic macular edema; DR, diabetic retinopathy; NPDR, nonproliferative DR; PDR, proliferative DR.
Drugs currently available or under investigation for management of DR and their status
| Drug or formulation | Mechanism or category | Clinical status/regulatory approval | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intravitreal injection of triamcinolone acetonide | Corticosteroid | Off-label use | Off-label use in combination with anti-VEGF agents and as adjunct with surgical intervention for PRP. |
| Dexamethasone implant | Corticosteroid | FDA approved | |
| Fluocinolone acetonide | Corticosteroid | FDA approved | |
| Ketorolac | NSAID | Phase II study | Under different clinical and preclinical development phases. |
| Etanercept | TNF-α inhibitor | Preclinical studies | Under different clinical and preclinical development phases. |
| Mab2F1 | Monoclonal antibody: Wnt coreceptor blocker | Animal study | |
| Bevacizumab | VEGF inhibitor: monoclonal antibody | Off-label use | FDA-approved anticancer, off-label use for DR in conjunction with anti-VEGF agents and surgical intervention. |
| Ranibizumab | VEGF inhibitor: monoclonal antibody | FDA approved | FDA approved for DME in 2014 (AMD 2006; RVO edema 2010). |
| Pegaptanib | VEGF inhibitor: RNA aptamer | Off-label use | FDA approved for AMD in 2004; Phase III trial completed for DME. |
| Aflibercept | VEGF inhibitor: decoy receptor fusion protein | FDA approved | FDA approved for DME in 2014; also FDA approved for macular edema following RVO and neovascular AMD. |
| KH902 | VEGF inhibitor: VEGFR decoy | Phase II study | |
| Rapamycin | mTOR inhibitor | Phase II study | |
| Decursin | VEGFR2 phosphorylation | Animal study | |
| Bevasiranib | Short interfering RNA targeting VEGF | Phase II study | |
| TG100801 | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor | Phase II study | |
| Pazopanib | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor | Animal study | |
| ARI-809 | Aldose reductase inhibitor | Animal study | |
| Epalrestat | Aldose reductase inhibitor | Animal study | |
| Fidarestat | Aldose reductase inhibitor | Animal study | |
| Sorbinil | Aldose reductase inhibitor | ||
| Tolrestat | Aldose reductase inhibitor | ||
| Ruboxistaurin | PKC-β inhibitor | Phase III study | |
| PKC-412 | PKC-β inhibitor | Phase III study | |
| Fasudil | Rho-associated protein kinase inhibitor | Phase III study | |
| Octreotide | Somatostatin analog | Phase III study | |
| Pegvisomant | IGF-1R inhibitor | Preclinical studies | |
| Aminoguanidine | AGE inhibitor | Phase III study | |
| GLY-230 | Selective inhibitor of glycation | Phase II study | |
| OPB-9195 | AGE inhibitor | Animal study | |
| ALT-711/Alagebrium | AGE inhibitor | Animal study | |
| LR-90 | AGE inhibitor | Animal study | |
| AGE inhibitor | Animal study | ||
| Ticlopidine | ADP receptor inhibitor | ||
| Vitrase (hyaluronidase) | Protease, spreading agent | Phase III | FDA approved as spreading agent; under Phase III clinical trial to investigate its promotion of the clearance of vitreous hemorrhage from PDR. |
| Plasmin | Proteolytic enzyme | ||
| Ocriplasmin | Recombinant protease with activity against fibronectin and laminin | FDA approved | |
| ACE inhibitors: lisinopril, captopril, enalapril | NA | ||
| Candesartan, losartan, telmisartan | Angiotensin-2 receptor antagonist | ||
| PD 123319 | Angiotensin-2 receptor antagonist | Animal study | |
| Valsartan | AT-1 receptor antagonist | Animal study | |
| Mecamylamine | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor | Phase II study | |
| PEgylated PEDF | PEDF bioactive derivative | Animal study | |
| Nitric oxide synthase inhibitor | Animal study | ||
| Baicalein | Flavonoid: lipoxygenase inhibitor | Animal study | |
| Apocynin | Reactive oxygen species inhibitor | Animal study | |
| Curcumin | PPAR-gamma upregulator | Animal study | |
| PJ-34 | PARP inhibitor | Animal study | |
Abbreviations: AGE, advanced glycation end-product; AMD, age-related macular degeneration; DME, diabetic macular edema; DR, diabetic retinopathy; PKC, protein kinase C; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; FDA, Food and Drug Administration; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PDR, proliferative DR; PEDF, pigment epithelium-derived factor; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; PRP, panretinal photocoagulation; RVO, retinal vascular occlusion; NA, not applicable.