Characterization of Retinal Disease Progression in Eyes With Non Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy in Diabetes Type 2 Using Non-invasive Procedures (CHART)
NCT ID: NCT04636307
Last Updated: 2025-12-05
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
202 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2021-09-22
2025-05-22
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Three different phenotypes of mild NPDR progression with different risks for development of Clinically Significant Macular Edema (CSME) were identified using cluster analysis based on the turnover rate of microaneurysms (MAT) and the central retinal thickness (CRT). Phenotype A, patients with low MAT and CRT \< 260 micron in women and \< 275 micron in men (on Cirrus Optical Coherence Tomography - OCT, corresponding to the mean CRT in healthy subjects plus 1 standard deviation, SD); Phenotype B, patients with low MAT and CRT ≥ 260 micron in women and ≥ 275 micron in men; and Phenotype C patients with high MAT. These phenotypes were recently confirmed in a larger population of NPDR patients. In this study, Phenotype B shows a risk for DR progression to Macular Edema (ME) of OR=13.30 and Phenotype C of OR=6.32. When CRT increase is present, then Phenotype C shows a higher risk for ME (OR=29.02). In these studies, the occurrence of proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) as an outcome was rare and did not allow statistical analysis. More recently it was shown that phenotype C identifies eyes at higher risk for development of CSME and PDR, whereas phenotype A identifies eyes at very low risk for vision-threatening complications.
Patients with phenotypes B and C are, therefore, the NPDR patients with higher risk for ME development and are those patients who may benefit from early therapeutic or preventive treatment. Therefore, a proper characterization of this population is of major interest for the understanding of the disease, and to the design of new therapeutical approaches that can facilitate adequate and timely interventions.
To better characterize these patients, new non-invasive methods are now available that allow for a better insight of the retinal changes that occurs in these patients. The Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography (OCT-A) and OCT-Leakage (OCT-L) are two of these methods that can be used in longitudinal studies. These methods allow to quantify capillary closure and leakage, the main alterations occurring in DR (ischemia and leakage) and which are considered to predict sight-threatening complications, ME and PDR. In recent studies it was shown that the vessel density in the superficial and deep layers, obtained with OCT-A, and the Low Optical Reflectivity (LOR) ratio obtained with OCT-L are altered even in the earlier stages of DR. These two methods are therefore expected to better characterize leaky and ischemic patients' phenotypes (i.e., phenotypes B and C, respectively), being therefore a major step in early diagnosis and timely treatment of DR patients. Measurement of neurodegeneration (ND) represented by thinning of Ganglion Cell Layer (GCL) and Inner Plexiform Layer (IPL) will also be performed.
This study aims to better characterize the retinal changes that occur during a 2-years follow-up period in patients with diabetes Type 2 and with the initial stages of NPDR and at higher risk for sight-threatening complications, allowing better characterization of eyes at risk of progression (phenotypes B and C). The inclusion will be based on patients with established retinopathy ETDRS 35, 43, 47 and 53, distributed to the different clinical sites in the study, creating the opportunity to demonstrate the progression phenotypes.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Interventions
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Biomarkers
To identify biomarkers obtained using non-invasive procedures that can predict disease progression and progression to sight-threatening stages of the disease and to characterize the retinal changes that occur in NPDR.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Age between 35 and 90 years;
* NPDR levels 35, 43, 47 or 53 (based on the ETDRS criteria - 7 fields CFP) after confirmation by the Reading Centre;
* Refraction with a spherical equivalent less than 5 Dp;
* Informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
* Cataract or other eye disease that may interfere with fundus examinations;
* Age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, vitreomacular disease, or other retinal vascular disease, or any ocular condition that, in the opinion of the investigator may affect retinopathy status or alter visual acuity during the study;
* Any eye surgery within a period of 6-months;
* Previous laser treatment or previous intravitreal injections;
* Any patient comorbidity likely to affect the eye and not related with diabetes or cardiovascular disease;
* Presence of CIME (CRT ≥ 290 μm in women and ≥ 305 μm in men) with vision loss or needing immediate treatment, according to clinical practice;
* Dilatation of the pupil \< 5 mm;
* Uncontrolled systemic hypertension (values outside normal range: systolic 70-210 mmHg and diastolic 50-120 mmHg).
35 Years
90 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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European Vision Institute Clinical Research Network
NETWORK
Association for Innovation and Biomedical Research on Light and Image
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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CS042 - Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital, CHU Dijon
Dijon, , France
CS067- Department of Ophthalmology, University Vita Salute - Scientific Institute of San Raffael, Milan
Milan, , Italy
CS063 - Excellence Eye Research Centre, University G. d'Annunzio of Chieti-Pescara
Pescara, , Italy
CS020 - G. B. Bietti Eye Foundation - IRCCS
Roma, , Italy
CS001 Centre for Clinical Trials - AIBILI
Coimbra, , Portugal
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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ECR-RET-2020-15
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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