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The influence of background diabetic retinopathy in the second eye on rates of progression of diabetic retinopathy between 2005 and 2010

The influence of background diabetic retinopathy in the second eye on rates of progression of diabetic retinopathy between 2005 and 2010
The influence of background diabetic retinopathy in the second eye on rates of progression of diabetic retinopathy between 2005 and 2010

Purpose: the Gloucestershire Diabetic Eye Screening Programme offers annual digital photographic screening for diabetic retinopathy to a countywide population of people with diabetes. This study was designed to investigate progression of diabetic retinopathy in this programme of the English NHS Diabetic Eye Screening Programme. 

Methods: mydriatic digital retinal photographs of people with diabetes screened on at least 2 occasions between 2005 and 2010 were graded and included in this study if the classification at first screening was no DR (R0), background DR in one (R1a) or both eyes (R1b). Times to detection of referable diabetic retinopathy (RDR) comprising maculopathy (M1), preproliferative (R2) or proliferative retinopathy (R3) were analysed using survival models. 

Results: data were available on 19 044 patients, 56% men, age at screening 66 (57-74) years (median, 25th, 75th centile). A total of 8.3% of those with R1a and 28.2% of those with R1b progressed to any RDR, hazard ratios 2.9 [2.5-3.3] and 11.3 [10.0-12.8]. Similarly 7.1% and 0.11% of those with R1a progressed to M1 and R3, hazard ratios 2.7 [2.3-3.2] and 1.6 [0.5-5.0], compared to 21.8% and 1.07% of those with R1b, hazard ratio 9.1 [7.8-10.4] and 15.0 [7.1-31.5].

Conclusions: the risk of progression is significantly higher for those with background DR in both eyes than those with background retinopathy in only one or in neither eye.

diabetic retinopathy, progression, risk factors, screening
1755-375X
e335-e339
Scanlon, Peter H.
4e3d2310-c79e-42db-ae29-7a7d6b278aa3
Stratton, Irene M.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Histed, Mark
74a91b35-3e1f-4813-8e8c-7d82ba555dba
Chave, Steve J.
615960e8-9700-47dd-a3a7-3c5e8168036e
Aldington, Stephen J.
0d0ac922-21f1-4198-91eb-893231cc53c4
Scanlon, Peter H.
4e3d2310-c79e-42db-ae29-7a7d6b278aa3
Stratton, Irene M.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Histed, Mark
74a91b35-3e1f-4813-8e8c-7d82ba555dba
Chave, Steve J.
615960e8-9700-47dd-a3a7-3c5e8168036e
Aldington, Stephen J.
0d0ac922-21f1-4198-91eb-893231cc53c4

Scanlon, Peter H., Stratton, Irene M., Histed, Mark, Chave, Steve J. and Aldington, Stephen J. (2013) The influence of background diabetic retinopathy in the second eye on rates of progression of diabetic retinopathy between 2005 and 2010. Acta Ophthalmologica, 91 (5), e335-e339. (doi:10.1111/aos.12074).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: the Gloucestershire Diabetic Eye Screening Programme offers annual digital photographic screening for diabetic retinopathy to a countywide population of people with diabetes. This study was designed to investigate progression of diabetic retinopathy in this programme of the English NHS Diabetic Eye Screening Programme. 

Methods: mydriatic digital retinal photographs of people with diabetes screened on at least 2 occasions between 2005 and 2010 were graded and included in this study if the classification at first screening was no DR (R0), background DR in one (R1a) or both eyes (R1b). Times to detection of referable diabetic retinopathy (RDR) comprising maculopathy (M1), preproliferative (R2) or proliferative retinopathy (R3) were analysed using survival models. 

Results: data were available on 19 044 patients, 56% men, age at screening 66 (57-74) years (median, 25th, 75th centile). A total of 8.3% of those with R1a and 28.2% of those with R1b progressed to any RDR, hazard ratios 2.9 [2.5-3.3] and 11.3 [10.0-12.8]. Similarly 7.1% and 0.11% of those with R1a progressed to M1 and R3, hazard ratios 2.7 [2.3-3.2] and 1.6 [0.5-5.0], compared to 21.8% and 1.07% of those with R1b, hazard ratio 9.1 [7.8-10.4] and 15.0 [7.1-31.5].

Conclusions: the risk of progression is significantly higher for those with background DR in both eyes than those with background retinopathy in only one or in neither eye.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 4 December 2012
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 April 2013
Published date: 11 July 2013
Keywords: diabetic retinopathy, progression, risk factors, screening

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487057
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487057
ISSN: 1755-375X
PURE UUID: 34bf5a49-6e29-4cde-af4a-dd4f54e623f3
ORCID for Irene M. Stratton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1172-7865

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Date deposited: 12 Feb 2024 17:31
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Peter H. Scanlon
Author: Irene M. Stratton ORCID iD
Author: Mark Histed
Author: Steve J. Chave
Author: Stephen J. Aldington

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