This article originally posted 26 December, 2006 and appeared in Issue 344
Drug Treatment Slows Macular Vision Loss in Diabetics
A drug commonly used to slow the loss of central vision has shown promise in stemming a common precursor of blindness in diabetics, which involves the same central light-sensitive area of retina, scientists report.
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Encouraged by the effect of ranibuzumab in people with macular degeneration,
the Hopkins researchers injected the drug into the eyes of 10 people losing
their sight from macular edema, one of many complications of diabetes and a
first stage of diabetic retinopathy.
Over the course of several months of therapy, every patient in the preliminary
Hopkins study could read at least two more lines on the standard eye chart,
the researchers said. Moreover, the thickness of the patients’ maculae,
the central part of the retina responsible for seeing fine details, decreased
an average of 85 percent.
The Hopkins group believes that ranibuzumab interferes with a protein that
spurs the growth of unwanted blood vessels in the back of the eye. Vascular
endothelial growth factor, or VEGF, is released when the oxygen supply in the
eye is restricted by blood vessel damage related to diabetes.
In a self-preserving attempt to acquire more oxygen, the VEGF signals for
the creation of new blood vessels, which almost always damage, rather than improve,
vision by blocking light’s entry onto the retina.
"We’ve suspected for awhile that ranibuzumab’s ability to
shut down VEGF’s signaling would do the trick because it’s highly
likely that VEGF is the culprit when it comes to diabetic macular edema,"
says Nguyen.
More than 4 million diabetics in the United States have diabetic retinopathy
and, according to the National Eye Institute, one in 12 of those experience
at least some vision loss.
Macular edema, a first stage of retinopathy, occurs when, over time, excess
uncontrolled blood sugar damages the tiny blood vessels in the eye, causing
fluid and fat to leak onto the retina at the back of the eye. The swelling interferes
with focus and blurs vision. Making matters worse, a lack of oxygen often then
triggers VEGF’s production cycle.
All 10 subjects in the study had some vision loss at the start of the clinical
trial, in which ranibuzumab was administered at the one, two, four and six month
marks. The thickness of each patient’s macula was also measured at each
point in the study using an advanced digital imaging technique.
"Within a week, several patients experienced dramatic reductions in the
thickness of their maculas, and there were further improvements with each injection,"
says Peter Campochiaro, M.D., the Dolores and George Eccles Professor of Ophthalmology
at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who is also an investigator
in the study.
Ranibuzumab is marketed for treatment of neovascular macular degeneration
by Genentech Inc. under the brand name of Lucentis
The American Journal of Ophthalmology, Dec. 2006
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