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Home » Resources » Clinical Studies » Intravitreal Ranibizumab or Triamcinolone Acetonide as Adjunctive Treatment to Panretinal Photocoagulation for Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy

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Intravitreal Ranibizumab or Triamcinolone Acetonide as Adjunctive Treatment to Panretinal Photocoagulation for Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy

Purpose | Background | Description | Patient Eligibility | Patient Recruitment Status | Current Status of Study | Results | Publications | Clinical Centers | NEI Representative | Resource Centers

Purpose:

  • To find out if treatment with an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone or an intravitreal injection of ranibizumab can prevent loss of vision caused by panretinal photocoagulation treatment.

Background:

Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) is manifested in retinal neovascularization at the disc (NVD) or elsewhere (NVE). Vitreous hemorrhage or traction detachment from PDR is a leading cause of severe visual loss and new onset blindness. Without intervention, 60 percent of individuals with diabetic retinopathy will eventually develop proliferative retinopathy, resulting in significant visual loss in nearly fifty percent.

Proliferative diabetic retinopathy is currently treated with scatter (panretinal) laser photocoagulation (PRP), which destroys areas of the retina but preserves central vision. PRP is most effectively seen in a regression of new vessels, stabilization of the neovascularization, and reduced risk of visual loss. However, the treatment is associated with unavoidable side effects, including macular edema with transient or permanent central vision loss, diminished vision loss, and night vision loss. The treatment applies laser burns to the peripheral retinal tissue, destroying outer photoreceptors and retinal pigment epithelium of the retina, and is thought to exert its effect by increasing oxygen delivery to the inner retina and decreasing viable hypoxic cells which are producing growth factors such as VEGF. Studies have implicated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) as the substance leading to neovascularization and/or increased vascular permeability. Thus, it is reasonable to expect that inhibition of VEGF could reduce both PDR and transient vision loss from macular edema. There are several anti-VEGF drugs. Ranibizumab is the drug to be evaluated in this trial. In one trial of ranibizumab on DME, ten patients with chronic DME received a series of 0.5mg intraocular injections. The treatments were well tolerated with no ocular or systemic adverse events. Since intraocular injections of ranibizumab significantly reduced foveal thickness and improved visual acuity in all ten patients, there is strong rationale to consider this drug as adjunctive therapy to PRP in an attempt to reduce the acute, transient edema that may occur with PRP.

Similarly, corticosteroids, a class of substances with anti-inflammatory properties, have demonstrated the ability to inhibit the expression of VEGF. Triamcinolone acetonide is often used as a periocular injection for the treatment of cystoid macular edema (CME) secondary to uveitis. Clinically, triamcinolone acetonide is used in the treatment of proliferative vitreoretinopathy and choroidal neovascularization. Studies on patients with proliferative diabetic retinopathy randomly assigned to receive 4 mg triamcinolone 10 to 15 days prior to PRP treatment showed a reduction in central macular thickening, and fluorescein leakage was greater in the injection group than in the control group at 9 and 12 months follow up. Mean visual acuity improved by one line in the injection group and worsened by two lines in the control group.

In summary, there is strong rationale that using either intravitreal ranibizumab or intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide as an adjunct to PRP could reduce the magnitude of vision loss.

Description:

This study is being conducted to determine whether intravitreal injection of an anti-VEGF drug or an intravitreal injection of a corticosteroid can reduce the occurrence of macular edema and visual acuity impairment following PRP. Eyes will be randomly assigned to one of the following three injection groups:

  • Intravitreal injection of 0.5 mg ranibizumab (Lucentis™) at baseline and 4 weeks
  • Intravitreal injection of 4 mg triamcinolone acetonide at baseline and sham injection at 4 weeks
  • Sham injection at baseline and 4 weeks

The initial injection (or sham) is given on the day of randomization. Focal (macular) photocoagulation is given 3 to 10 days following the injection. Panretinal (scatter) photocoagulation can be initiated either on the same day as the focal photocoagulation (immediately following the focal photocoagulation) or on a subsequent day but must be initiated within 14 days of the baseline injection. Required follow-up visits occur at 4, 14, 34 and 56 weeks.

Patient Eligibility:

General Inclusion Criteria

To be eligible, the following inclusion criteria must be met:

  1. Age >= 18 years
  2. Diagnosis of diabetes mellitus (type 1 or type 2)
  3. Fellow eye (if not a study eye) meets criteria.
  4. Able and willing to provide informed consent.

General Exclusion Criteria

A subject is not eligible if any of the following exclusion criteria are present:

  1. Significant renal disease, defined as a history of chronic renal failure requiring dialysis or kidney transplant.
  2. A condition that, in the opinion of the investigator, would preclude participation in the study (e.g., unstable medical status including blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and glycemic control).
  3. Participation in an investigational trial within 30 days of randomization that involved treatment with any drug that has not received regulatory approval at the time of study entry.
  4. Known allergy to any component of the study drugs.
  5. Blood pressure > 180/110 (systolic above 180 or diastolic above 110).
  6. Major surgery within 28 days prior to randomization or major surgery planned during the next 6 months.
  7. Myocardial infarction, other cardiac event requiring hospitalization, stroke, transient ischemic attack, or treatment for acute congestive heart failure within 4 months prior to randomization.
  8. Systemic anti-VEGF or pro-VEGF treatment within 4 months prior to randomization.
  9. For women of child-bearing potential: pregnant or lactating or intending to become pregnant within the next 12 months.
  10. Subject is expecting to move out of the area of the clinical center to an area not covered by another clinical center during the 12 months of the study.

Study Eye Inclusion Criteria

The subject must have at least one eye meeting all of the inclusion criteria and none of the exclusion criteria listed below. A subject can have two study eyes if both eyes are eligible at the time of randomization.

  1. Presence of severe nonproliferative or proliferative diabetic retinopathy for which investigator intends to complete panretinal photocoagulation within 49 days after randomization.
  2. Diabetic macular edema present on clinical exam and central subfield thickness on OCT >250 microns, within 8 days of randomization.
  3. Best corrected E-ETDRS visual acuity letter score >=24 (i.e., 20/320 or better), within 8 days of randomization.
  4. Media clarity, pupillary dilation, and subject cooperation sufficient to administer panretinal photocoagulation and obtain adequate fundus photographs and OCT.
  5. If prior macular photocoagulation has been performed, the investigator believes that the study eye may possibly benefit from additional focal photocoagulation.

Study Eye Exclusion Criteria

The following exclusions apply to the study eye only (i.e., they may be present for the nonstudy eye unless otherwise specified):

  1. Prior panretinal photocoagulation that was sufficiently extensive that the investigator does not believe that at least 1200 additional burns are needed or possible within 49 days after randomization.
  2. Macular edema is considered to be due to a cause other than diabetic macular edema.
  3. An ocular condition is present such that, in the opinion of the investigator, preventing visual acuity loss would not improve from resolution of macular edema (e.g., foveal atrophy, pigment abnormalities, dense subfoveal hard exudates, nonretinal condition).
  4. An ocular condition is present (other than diabetes) that, in the opinion of the investigator, might affect macular edema or alter visual acuity during the course of the study (e.g., retinal vein or artery occlusion, uveitis or other ocular inflammatory disease, neovascular glaucoma, etc.).
  5. Substantial cataract that, in the opinion of the investigator, is likely to be decreasing visual acuity by 3 lines or more (i.e., cataract would be reducing acuity to 20/40 or worse if eye was otherwise normal).
  6. History of treatment for DME at any time in the past 4 months (such as focal/grid macular photocoagulation, intravitreal or peribulbar corticosteroids, anti-VEGF drugs, or any other treatment).
  7. History of major ocular surgery (including vitrectomy, cataract extraction, scleral buckle, any intraocular surgery, etc.) within prior 4 months or anticipated within the next 6 months following randomization.
  8. History of YAG capsulotomy performed within 2 months prior to randomization.
  9. Aphakia.
  10. Intraocular pressure >= 25 mmHg.
  11. History of open-angle glaucoma (either primary open-angle glaucoma or other cause of open-angle glaucoma; note: angle-closure glaucoma is not an exclusion criterion).
  12. History of steroid-induced intraocular pressure elevation that required IOP-lowering treatment.
  13. History of prior herpetic ocular infection.
  14. Exam evidence of ocular toxoplasmosis.
  15. Exam evidence of pseudoexfoliation.
  16. Exam evidence of external ocular infection, including conjunctivitis, chalazion, or significant blepharitis.

Fellow Eye Criteria

The fellow eye must meet the following criteria:

  1. Intraocular pressure < 25 mmHg.
  2. No history of open-angle glaucoma (either primary open-angle glaucoma or other cause of open-angle glaucoma; note: angle-closure glaucoma is not an exclusion criterion).
  3. No history of steroid-induced intraocular pressure elevation that required IOP-lowering treatment.
  4. No exam evidence of pseudoexfoliation.

Patient Recruitment Status:

Recruiting. Comments: Recruitment began March 20, 2007.

Current Status of Study:

Ongoing. Comments:

Results:

No results as yet.

Publications

None

Clinical Centers


California
Stewart A. Daniels, M.D.
Bay Area Retina Associates
Walnut Creek, CA 94598

Florida
Glenn Wing, M.D.
Retina Consultants of Southwest Florida
Fort Myers, FL 33912

Florida
Scott M. Friedman M. D.
Central Florida Retina Institute
2202 Lakeland Hills Blvd.
Lakeland, FL 33805
USA

Georgia
Dennis M. Marcus, M.D.
Southeast Retina Center
3685 Wheeler Rd.
Augusta, GA 30909
USA

Indiana
Raj K. Maturi, M.D.
Raj K. Maturi, M.D., P.C.
Indianapolis, IN 46280

Kentucky
Carl W. Baker, M.D.
Paducah Retinal Center
1900 Broadway
Suite 2
Paducah, KY 42001
USA

Maryland
Michael J. Elman M.D.
Elman Retina Group, PA
9114 Philadelphia Road
Suite 310
Baltimore, MD 21237
USA

Minnesota
Abdhish Bhavsar, M.D.
Retina Center, PA
710 East 24th Street
Suite 304
Minneapolis, MN 55404
USA

North Carolina
Craig M. Greven, M.D.
Wake Forest University Eye Center
Winston-Salem, NC 27157

North Carolina
David Browning, M.D.
Charlotte Eye Ear Nose and Throat Assoc, PA
6035 Fairview Road
Charlotte, NC 28210
USA

Rhode Island
Robert H. Janigian Jr. M. D.
Retina Consultants
690 Eddy Street
Providence, RI 02903
USA

Tennessee
Joseph Googe, Jr., M.D.
Southeastern Retina Associates, P.C.
Knoxville, TN 37909

Texas
Brian B. Berger, M.D.
Retina Research Center
Austin, TX 78705

Texas
Gary E. Fish, M.D.
Texas Retina Associates
Dallas, TX 75231

Texas
Michel Shami, M.D.
Texas Retina Associates
Lubbock, TX 79424

NEI Representative



Maryann Redford, DDS, MPH
National Eye Institute
National Institutes of Health
Suite 1300
5635 Fishers Lane MSC 9300
Bethesda, MD 20892-9300
U.S.A.
Telephone: (301) 451-2020
Fax: (301) 402-0528
Email: maryann.redford@nei.nih.gov

Resource Centers


Coordinating Center
Roy W. Beck, M.D., Ph.D.
Jaeb Center for Health Research
15310 Amberly Drive
Suite 350
Tampa, FL 33647
U.S.A.
Telephone: (813) 975-8690
Fax: 1-800-816-7601
Email: rbeck@jaeb.org
URL: Jaeb Center for Health Research

DRCR Network Chair
Neil M. Bressler, M.D.
Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute
Johns Hopkins University
550 North Broadway
Suite 115
Baltimore, MD 21205-2005
USA
Telephone: (410) 955-8342
Fax: (410) 955-0845
Email: nbressler@jhmi.edu

Reading Center
Ronald P. Danis, M.D.
UW-Dept. of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences
Fundus Photograph Reading Center
Park West One
406 Science Drive
Suite 400
Madison, WI 53711-1068
USA
Telephone: (608) 263-5749
Fax: (608) 263-0525
Email: rdanis@rc.ophth.wisc.edu

Study Chair
Alexander J. Brucker M. D.
Scheie Eye Institute
51 North 39th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
U.S.A.
Telephone: (215) 662-8675
Fax: (215) 243-4696
Email: ajbrucke@mail.med.upenn.edu

Last Updated: 7/31/2008

 

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