Aim: To prospectively monitor subclinical changes in capillary perfusion and retinal layer thickness in patients with type 2 diabetes and early diabetic retinal disease over 2 years.
Methods: In this longitudinal study we performed biannual retinal vascular imaging using optical coherence tomography angiography (RTVue) to analyse the foveal avascular zone (FAZ) area, perimeter, acircularity index (AI) and parafoveal superficial/deep vessel density (VD). Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (Spectralis) was used to measure the thickness of nine macular layers and the peripapillary nerve fibre layer.
Results: Among 117 eyes (58 left) of 59 patients (21 female), 105 had no diabetic retinopathy (DR), 6 mild and 6 moderate non-proliferative DR at baseline. We found DR progression in 13 eyes at year 2. The FAZ area (+0.008±0.002 mm2/year, p<0.0001), perimeter (+0.036±0.010 mm/year, p=0.006) and AI (+0.005±0.002/year, p=0.0280) increased significantly. A pronounced decrease was found in the superficial (-1.425±0.290%/year, p<0.0001) but not the deep VD. Inner neuroretinal loss was confined to the ganglion cell (-0.539±0.150 µm/year, p=0.0004) and the inner plexiform layer (-0.361±0.127 µm/year, p=0.0045). In the outer retina, we observed a statistically significant decrease in thickness in the outer plexiform, photoreceptor layer and pigment epithelium of -0.921±0.161 µm/year, -0.325±0.139 µm/year and -0.385±0.084 µm/year, respectively.
Conclusion: Subclinical signs of microangiopathy and neurodegeneration appear in parallel and are highly progressive even in the earliest stages of diabetic retinal disease. Trial registration number EudraCT20156000239634.
Keywords: retina.
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