Abstract

Diabetic retinopathy is a disease caused by increased permeability of retinal vessels. Its incidence and prevalence have been increasing due to urbanization, greater life expectancy and the habits of modern life. Its onset is insidious and it may lead to blindness in 75% of individuals who have been diabetic for more than 20 years. The aim here was to evaluate the evidence from Cochrane systematic reviews on interventions relating to diabetic retinopathy. Review of systematic reviews, conducted at Cochrane Brazil. We included Cochrane systematic reviews on interventions relating to diabetic retinopathy. Two researchers evaluated the inclusion criteria, summarized the reviews and presented the results narratively. Ten reviews met the inclusion criteria. They showed some evidence of benefits from: (a) photocoagulation for diabetic retinopathy; (b) strict glucose and pressure control for postponing the onset of retinopathy; (c) antiangiogenic drugs for macular edema (high-quality evidence); (d) anti-vascular endothelial growth factor agents for proliferative diabetic retinopathy (very low to low-quality evidence); and (e) intravitreal injection or surgical implantation for treating persistent or refractory macular edema. However, blood pressure control seems to have no benefit after the onset of retinopathy. Only a few options are likely to be effective for treating diabetic retinopathy. These include photocoagulation and anti-vascular endothelial growth factor agents. Strict glucose and pressure control seem to postpone the onset of retinopathy. For macular edema, antiangiogenic drugs, intravitreal injection and surgical implantation seem to have some benefit.

Highlights

  • Diabetic retinopathy is a secondary retinal disease caused by vascular changes due to diabetes

  • An initial search resulted in 21 reviews and, after reading the titles and abstracts, ten Cochrane systematic reviews (SRs) were found to be related to the topic and fulfilled the inclusion criteria

  • In this review,[12] the authors proposed to assess the use of anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) after vitrectomy

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetic retinopathy is a secondary retinal disease caused by vascular changes due to diabetes. It is a common complication of diabetes and is the leading cause of decreased vision in the economically active population, with large negative impacts both on public health and on the social security system. Like other vascular changes in diabetic patients, retinopathy starts in the endothelium. This tissue modulates vascular functions through releasing or inhibiting nitric oxide, endothelin, angiotensin and other substances that act in relation to inflammation, platelet aggregation, permeability, oxidative stress, blood clotting and vascular tone.[3,4,5,6,7]

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