Subclinical CVD Inflammatory Markers
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Learn about the correlation between diabetic retinopathy, cardiovascular disease, and inflammatory markers, analyzing relevant data and risk factors.
Subclinical CVD Inflammatory Markers
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Presentation Transcript
Diabetic Retinopathy Subclinical CVDInflammatory Markers Barbara Eden Kobrin Klein, MD, MPH Professor University of Wisconsin Madison Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences for the MESA Eye Group
Diabetic Retinopathy • Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a leading cause of blindness among adults under the age of 65 years in the United States • More than 60% of patients with type 2 DM develop DR • 5-20% develop proliferative DR, after 20 years of disease
Diabetic Retinopathy and Subclinical CVD • DR related to clinical CVD • DR was related to an increased CVD and mortality in WESDR • Other studies found a positive association between DR and coronary calcification, carotid artery IMT and ABI
Methods • Fundus photographs • Camera: 45 degree 6.3 MP digital non-mydriatic camera (Canon, Lake Success, NY) • Two photographic fields each eye: the first centered on the optic disc and the second centered on the fovea • Standard software for image acquisition and archiving (Digital Healthcare Inc. Eye QSL, England) • Retinopathy graded at University of Wisconsin, Madison according to protocol by trained graders with QC monitoring • Fasting blood glucose
Results • 921 of 6176 MESA ppt. at 2nd exam had DM • diabetes defined (FBG ≥7.0 mmol/L (≥126 mg/dl)) or used hypoglycemic medication • gradable photographs
Vision-Threatening Retinopathy • No significant associations
Stratified Analyses • Data suggest that OR may differ by subgroups
Comment • These data give slim evidence of a cross-sectional relationship of the presence of diabetic retinopathy and LV/MV • Temporal relationship of these characteristics is unknown • At this time a likely interpretation is that sub-clinical CVD and retinopathy are the result of diabetes but they may not be causally related to each other
Inflammatory Markers and Diabetic Retinopathy: Pathology • Loss of retinal pericytes and endothelial cells characterize pathologic changes of diabetic retinopathy • DR characterized by increased vascular permeability and increasing vascular occlusion
Background • Hoorn Study and Eurodiab found markers of systemic inflammation associated with DR • Factor VIII (pro-coagulant activity) associated with DR • Other hemostatic factors associated with DR in some studies
Comment • Some markers of inflammatory activity, endothelial dysfunction and homeostatic factors are associated with DR after controlling for relevant risk factors • However, these data are cross-sectional so temporal relationship is unknown • Relatively low prevalence of retinopathy especially in some of the racial/ethnic groups may reflect bias in recruiting that may influence the relationships we investigated