| Literature DB >> 29925789 |
Wei Wang1, Amy C Y Lo2.
Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the most common complication of diabetes mellitus (DM). It has long been recognized as a microvascular disease. The diagnosis of DR relies on the detection of microvascular lesions. The treatment of DR remains challenging. The advent of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapy demonstrated remarkable clinical benefits in DR patients; however, the majority of patients failed to achieve clinically-significant visual improvement. Therefore, there is an urgent need for the development of new treatments. Laboratory and clinical evidence showed that in addition to microvascular changes, inflammation and retinal neurodegeneration may contribute to diabetic retinal damage in the early stages of DR. Further investigation of the underlying molecular mechanisms may provide targets for the development of new early interventions. Here, we present a review of the current understanding and new insights into pathophysiology in DR, as well as clinical treatments for DR patients. Recent laboratory findings and related clinical trials are also reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: anti-VEGF; inflammation; laser treatment; retinal degeneration; vascular pathology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29925789 PMCID: PMC6032159 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19061816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Anti-angiogenic agents for the treatment of DR.
| Classification | Drugs | Status for DR Treatment | Clinical Benefits | Adverse Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-VEGF | Ranibizumab (Lucentis) [ | FDA approved | Greater BCVA improvement and greater reduction in CRT over laser in treating DME (DRCR.net Protocol T, RESOLVE and RESTORE trials); non-inferior to PRP in treating PDR at two years (DRCR.net Protocol S) | a. Elevation in intraocular pressure |
| Pegaptanib (Macugen) [ | FDA approved | Greater BCVA improvement over sham groups in treating DME (phase 2/3, multicenter, two-year trial) | a. Conjunctival hemorrhage | |
| Aflibercept (EYLEA) [ | FDA approved | Greater BCVA improvement over laser in treating DME (VISTA, VIVID, DRCR.net Protocol T trials) and PDR (CLARITY trial) | a. Elevation in intraocular pressure | |
| Bevacizumab (Avastin) [ | Off-label use | Greater reduction in CRT and better median visual acuity over laser (DRCR.net Protocol T trial) | a. Elevation in intraocular pressure | |
| Non-specific anti-angiogenic | Squalamine (inhibits VEGF and other growth factors) [ | Phase 2 trial ( | - | - |
| AKB-9778 (Tie2 activator) [ | Phase 2 trial ( | Greater reduction in CRT in the combination group over ranibizumab monotherapy group (phase 2a clinical trial) | a. Diabetic retinal edema worse | |
| Nesvacumab (Anti-Ang-2) ( | Clinical trial (RUBY trial) in progress | Results of phase 2 RUBY trial did not provide sufficient differentiation between the combined (nesvacumab + aflibercept) and aflibercept monotherapy treatments to warrant phase 3 development | No new safety signals observed when compared with other anti-angiogenic agents | |
| RO6867461 (bispecific antibody: anti-ang-2 + anti-VEGF) | Clinical trial (BOULEVARD trial) in progress ( | Greater adjusted BCVA improvement and greater reduction in CRT over ranibizumab in DME patients (phase 2 BOULEVARD trial) | Well tolerated with no new safety signals observed |
Figure 1① Nesvacumab activates Tie-2 signaling and decreases vascular permeability by inhibiting Ang-2, an antagonist of Tie2. ② AKB-9778 activates Tie-2 signaling by inhibiting ③ VE-PTP, a negative regulator of Tie-2.
Anti-inflammatory drugs for the treatment of DR.
| Classification | Drugs | Status for DR Treatment | Clinical Benefits | Adverse Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intravitreal steroids | Triamcinolone [ | Off-label use | Greater improvements in triamcinolone + prompt laser group over laser alone in pseudophakic eyes | a. Cataract surgery |
| DEX implant (Ozurdex) [ | FDA approved | Greater BCVA improvement and greater reduction in CRT over sham group in patients with DME (three-year trial) | a. Cataract | |
| FA insert (Iluvien, 0.2 mg) [ | FDA approved | Greater BCVA improvement over sham group in patients with DME over two years | a. Cataract surgery | |
| IL-6 inhibitor | EBI-031 ( | Clinical trial ( | - | - |
| IL-6 receptor inhibitor | Tocilizumab ( | Clinical trial (READ-4 study, | - | - |
| Integrin inhibitor | Luminate ( | Phase 2b trial (PACIFIC, | Non-inferiority to bevacizumab in mean change in BCVA and CRT for the treatment of DME (phase 2b trial, DEL MAR) | Well-tolerated with no drug toxicity or intraocular inflammation noted (phase 2b trial, DEL MAR) |
Laser photocoagulation for the treatment of DR.
| Classification | Drugs | Status for DR Treatment | Clinical Benefits | Adverse Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional laser treatments | Focal/grid laser [ | Adjuvant treatment for DME | Reduce risk of moderate visual loss, increases the chance of visual improvement, decreases the frequency of persistent macular edema (Early Treatment Diabetes Retinopathy Study (ETDRS)) | a. Visual acuity loss |
| PRP [ | Adjuvant treatment for PDR with high-risk complications | Reduce the rate of severe visual loss in PDR and inhibit the progression of retinopathy (Diabetic Retinopathy Study (DRS)) | a. Visual acuity loss | |
| New laser approaches | PASCAL [ | Under clinical evaluation | Precise control of the laser; Decreased treatment time | - |
| D-MPL [ | Under clinical evaluation | Minimize collateral damage | - | |
| NAVILAS [ | Under clinical evaluation | High accuracy of laser spots | - |
Other treatments for the treatment of DR.
| Classification | Drugs | Status for DR Treatment | Clinical Benefits | Adverse Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiolipin inhibitor | MTP-131 (OcuviaTM) [ | Clinical trial ( | - | - |
| Mitochondria specific antioxidant | ALA [ | Under clinical evaluation | Improved contrast sensitivity in type 1 and type 2 diabetes patients | - |
| Antioxidant | Lutein [ | Under clinical evaluation | Visual improvement in DR patients | - |