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The association between retinal vascular geometry changes and diabetic retinopathy and their role in prediction of progression: an exploratory study
Authors
A Kifley
A Mandecka
+42 more
Andrew Hunter
AV Stanton
B Al-Diri
Bashir Al-Diri
CD Murray
David HW Steel
DS Fong
E Alibrahim
E Fanucci
FM Islam
H Leung
J Lowell
KW Bronson-Castain
L Zhou
LA King
LD Hubbard
M Habib
M Porta
M Zamir
Maged S Habib
MB Sasongko
MS Roy
N Chapman
N Chapman
N Cheung
N Patton
N Witt
NG Congdon
O Brinchmann-Hansen
P Benitez-Aguirre
PH Gregson
R Klein
R Klein
R Klein
SJ Aldington
SL Rogers
SM Rassam
TA Gardiner
TM Curtis
TT Nguyen
TT Nguyen
TY Wong
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: The study describes the relationship of retinal vascular geometry (RVG) to severity of diabetic retinopathy (DR), and its predictive role for subsequent development of proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR). Methods. The research project comprises of two stages. Firstly, a comparative study of diabetic patients with different grades of DR. (No DR: Minimal non-proliferative DR: Severe non-proliferative DR: PDR) (10:10: 12: 19). Analysed RVG features including vascular widths and branching angles were compared between patient cohorts. A preliminary statistical model for determination of the retinopathy grade of patients, using these features, is presented. Secondly, in a longitudinal predictive study, RVG features were analysed for diabetic patients with progressive DR over 7 years. RVG at baseline was examined to determine risk for subsequent PDR development. Results: In the comparative study, increased DR severity was associated with gradual vascular dilatation (p = 0.000), and widening of the bifurcating angle (p = 0.000) with increase in smaller-child-vessel branching angle (p = 0.027). Type 2 diabetes and increased diabetes duration were associated with increased vascular width (p = <0.05 In the predictive study, at baseline, reduced small-child vascular width (OR = 0.73 (95 CI 0.58-0.92)), was predictive of future progression to PDR. Conclusions: The study findings suggest that RVG alterations can act as novel markers indicative of progression of DR severity and establishment of PDR. RVG may also have a potential predictive role in determining the risk of future retinopathy progression. © 2014 Habib et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd
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info:doi/10.1186%2F1471-2415-1...
Last time updated on 18/03/2019