Effect of Intensive Diabetes Therapy on the Progression of Diabetic Retinopathy in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes: 18 Years of Follow-up in the DCCT/EDIC

Publication Description
The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) demonstrated that a mean of 6.5 years of intensive therapy aimed at near-normal glucose levels reduced the risk of development and progression of retinopathy by as much as 76% compared with conventional therapy. The Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications study (EDIC) observational follow-up showed that the risk of further progression of retinopathy 4 years after the DCCT ended was also greatly reduced in the former intensive group, despite nearly equivalent levels of HbA1c, a phenomenon termed metabolic memory. Metabolic memory was shown to persist through 10 years of follow-up. We now describe the risk of further progression of retinopathy, progression to proliferative diabetic retinopathy, clinically significant macular edema, and the need for intervention (photocoagulation or anti-VEGF) over 18 years of follow-up in EDIC. The cumulative incidence of each retinal outcome continues to be lower in the former intensive group. However, the year-to-year incidence of these outcomes is now similar, owing in large part to a reduction in risk in the former conventional treatment group.

Primary Author
Lachin,John M.
White,Neil H.
Hainsworth,Dean P.
Sun,Wanjie
Cleary,Patricia A.
Nathan,David M.

Volume
64

Issue
2

Start Page
631

Other Pages
642

Publisher
American Diabetes Association

URL
https://search.datacite.org/works/10.2337/db14-0930

PMID
25204977



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Diabetes (New York, N.Y.)

Publication Year
2015

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
1939-327X

Document Object Index
10.2337/db14-0930