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TRANSCRIPTION CITY TYPING SERVICES httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk [email protected] 0208 816 8584 TITLE: Presentation 1 Mr A Sharma DATE: 14th February 2017 NUMBER OF SPEAKERS: 1 Numbers Speakers TRANSCRIPT STYLE: Intelligent Verbatim FILE DURATION: 20 Minutes 45 Sec TRANSCRIPTIONIST: Marg Searing SPEAKERS AS: Mr A Sharma 1 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk GP Eye Health Network: Diabetic Retinopathy, Mr A Sharma AS: So, my remit is to talk very briefly on diabetic retinopathy which I don’t want to bore people to death. But, it’s a very, very important topic. Yes, we need to make sure we’re getting our disease registers up to date, monitoring the patients, checking all the parameters. And we do know that controlling all the parameters including blood pressure and lipids is a very important part of managing the retinopathy and not just controlling their long term diabetic control. We do know that studies have been done, published some years ago, now, in 2007 to show that managing the lipids using fibrates. And the studies were the field study and the Accord study published in the Lancet some years ago, even combined with a statin, it reduces progression of retinopathy. Particularly, the lipid exudates in the macular. So, all those yellow areas that we’ll look at in the macular are very, very difficult to control. Reducing your cholesterol with statins and fibrates as a combined therapy, obviously, if medically tolerated can be beneficial for the patient over a period of four years. However, screening is very, very important and I know the disease registers are all being used to make sure screening is as widely encompassing as possible for all patients with a diagnosis of diabetes. So, the epidemiology? Well, the figures just get worse and worse. The latest data that I’ve got from the office of National Statistics, shows a prevalence of around about 5%. But if you look at all the borderline cases and the impaired glucose tolerance cases, I think the figure can be a lot, lot higher. The 5% figure comes from this publication from the National Statistics, but also patients from South East Asian origin or African origin the prevalence can be three to six times higher. So, it’s incredibly important that we’ve got the resources in place to make sure we can screen all these patients. Now, the National Screening Committee from 2005 recommended a new way of classifying retinopathy. I don’t want to bore you to death with all, of these, but basically, proliferate retinopathy is now R3 and maculopathy can be either there or not, zero or one. P just basically, means the patient has had laser treatment. So, if it’s R3 or R3 M1, here, that means I’ve got proliferate retinopathy and its sight threatening and 2 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk that is urgent treatment. So, you might see letters from Ophthalmologists or particularly optometrists who will use that classification nomenclature. R2 can be seen routinely as normal and R1 background retinopathy can be monitored in the community with regular screening. So, this is moderate, what we call R2 type retinopathy and as you know from medical school days, using the ophthalmoscope and trying to spot these haemorrhages in exudate. And basically, when they say, ‘cotton wool spots’ that’s just a description of pre-proliferative changes. So, when you get haemorrhages in exudate it doesn’t necessarily mean that they are gonna need urgent treatment unless they’re within one disc diameter of the fovea. But if you’ve got cotton wool spots they are pre-proliferative. They are patients who within a few months will develop proliferative retinopathy. And proliferative retinopathy, well we can see what exudates will look like. Scattered lipid exudates throughout the macular. That’s a cracking case of diabetic maculopathy and they’re called ‘circinate exudates’ because they appear in a circular fashion predominantly because somewhere in the centre is a leaking microaneurysm. So, that’s maculopathy and macular oedema which is what we used to call retinal thickening, can, actually, be detected now very, very accurately using what’s called optical coherence tomography and I’ll go on that in a minute. But basically, it produces a laser reflected image of this … of the retina. It’s not a thermal laser. It’s a non-thermal laser that shows up pockets of fluid within the actual macular region itself. In the old days, we used to, well even now even to detect this at a subtle level, you’d have to inject fluorescein dye in to the blood stream and that circulates around the body. And within about 15 maybe 30 seconds, you get leakage and pooling of dye in the macular region. And that’s very, very important cos that’s sight threatening. Nowadays we can do it relatively non-invasively using optical coherence tomography. We’ve mentioned about lipids and about controlling macrovascular disease which is a risk for all our diabetics. Considering statins apart from in pregnancy and fenofibrates what we’ve already mentioned as per the studies published in 2007 and 2010. Childhood diabetes that also, is a risk factor for retinopathy. And the figure goes up the older the child presents with diabetes. So, if they 3 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk have diabetes diagnosed at the age of 10, there’s 1% prevalence but that goes up to about 17% if they’ve had it picked up later on. So, the general thing is that within four years of diagnosis, everybody including children have, to be within a screening programme. And we know from the older studies such as the DCCT and the UKPDS, that controlling the diabetes itself reduces your risk of developing proliferated diabetic retinopathy by about 47%. So, metabolic control is highly important, I don’t want … I do want to just re-emphasise that. And for the none dia … the type 2 diabetics, the risk reductions are pretty, similar, about the order of 32% reduction in proliferation. Neovascular chances can lead to sight loss. And neovascular changes in type 1 diabetes are predominantly due to … will cause sight loss in about 20% of patients. Macular oedema is responsible for sight loss in about 25% of patients. So, a fair proportion of sight threatening retinopathy is due to treatable causes. What we know that after a long history of diabetes, all patients, well after 20 years of type 1 diabetes, all patients will have some degree of retinopathy. Some of that is unavoidable. Type 2 patients about the order of 60% of patients after 20 years will have retinopathy. And when type 2 patients go on to start insulin, the proliferation, the rates of proliferation do go up but that’s partly due to the severity of the disease process not that the fact they’re actually taking insulin. We’ve mentioned the diabetic macular oedema and we know that the diabetic macular oedema can be made worse by the diabetes affecting the blood vessels. Also, the level of hypoxia can stimulate production of this which is called, vascular endothelial growth factor. And that can also exacerbate. Not just proliferation of vessels but leakage in to the macular as well. We know about the screening standards. Over the age of 12, obviously, patients need to be screened. I mentioned four years, there was a figure on that earlier on, but basically, as soon as they’re diagnosed, if they’re over the age of 12, they need to be in to the screening programme very early on, within three months of diagnosis. The mechanisms of retinopathy, we’ve mentioned all about most of these classifications. Laser treatment which is administered on a 4 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk microscope like this with the patient having an anaesthetic and a lens on the eye. And the laser can be targeted to those leaking area of blood vessels, either in a focal pattern, or a grid pattern. But more commonly what we try and do is utilise pan-retinol photocoagulation for proliferative retinopathy still. That’s still the safest standard treatment that’s in widespread use. Now, you will certainly be aware of all the other modalities of treatment of diabetic retinopathy, such as injections of drugs directly in to the eye. Now there is an area of eyeball called the pars plana, just behind the lens equator where if a needle is injected into the vitreous at a perpendicular angle, there’s no damage to the retina and there’s no damage to the lens and there’s no damage to the vascular structure, it’s just through the ciliary body. So, that area of the pars plana which is about three and a half, four millimetres back from the corneal limbus is the only place to safely inject a drug into the eye. And we can inject all manner of drugs such as steroids of anti-VEGF drugs such as lucentis and also a new one called Eylea. We can go on to the patterns of laser. We’ve mentioned about focal grid. This is panretinal photocoagulation which is quite a striking aggressive but relatively well used mode of treatment that has reduced proliferation at the optic disc of new vessels but shutting down production of vascular endothelial growth factor. And it works by just doing that, killing the cells that produce the molecule and it reduces sight loss by about 30 to 40% and that’s been tried and tested for many, many years. We talked about injections and the molecule that we’re trying to block is vascular endothelial growth factor secreted by multiple layers in the retina. But what vascular endothelial growth factor does is it makes blood vessels leak and also, causes the production of endothelial cells. So, there are lots and lots of leaky vessels in the retina with VEGF. And over the last five to six years, we’ve now changed our advice in that laser in the macular region is predominantly for those areas where the disease is just outside the foveal zone. Which is the central 400 microns of the fovea. So, if it’s outside that zone, it’s safe to administer laser cos laser is a destructive treatment modality. But if it’s right on the centre and the centre is actually oedematous to about 400 microns thickness then you are now licensed to give Lucentis or Ranibizumab. 5 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk I put a question mark over Bevacizumab although the … it’s not a licensed drug. It’s off licence. It therefore will have to be applied separately but we have got funding now for Ranibizumab and that’s the drug that we’re all using. This is the machine that actually generates the scans that tells the surgeon how the thick the retina is in the centre and it’s called the optical coherence tomography. And the patient just puts their chin on the chinrest, forehead against there, totally non-invasive with non-thermal laser that causes laser interferometry and reflections from different layers of the retina. And it generates a map, a thickness map, of the retina such as this. And this is what a normal retinal profile should look like with the centre around about 180 to 200 microns in thickness. If it gets to more than 400 microns you are then eligible for treatment with Lucentis. So, a lot of patients now need scans, injections and a repeating cycle of those fairly regularly, especially in the first year of treatment. That shows another image of macular oedema. Now, macular oedema can be due to all hosts of other things as well. But if they’ve got diabetes and no other cause for it, then it’s generally the diabetic retinopathy that causes it. So, what are the results from using intravitreal therapy? So, that’s intra-vitreous injections of drugs. Well, we know steroids will cause a rise in pressure and also precipitate or accelerate the development of cataract. So, we try to avoid giving steroids in those patients who have got glaucoma or cataract. So, it rules out a fair proportion of patients who have got clear lenses who don’t want to develop a cataract. So, the first line treatment really, is intravitreal Lucentis. And you can defer the laser or do the laser if it’s extra-foveal. It is now shown that with the data, particularly over the last five-six years, that central thickness of the retina is better treated with Lucentis and that leads to an improvement in visual outcomes as is shown on this graph where the top two lines which is the organ and the light blue are Ranibizumab with prompt or deferred laser showing lines of vision gained. And the bottom two lines are people who have had either a sham injection or just steroid with laser. 6 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk So, the data is out there that anti-VEGF injections are the best first line treatment for macular oedema affecting the central part of the fovea. And that’s what NICE have now recommended and the cut off they use is 400 microns of retinal thickness as measured on the OCT. The cost of the drug is substantial. The cost of Lucentis is around £700 per vial. And if you estimate giving that about eight times in a year, the costs do add up. So, the manufacturers have provided the drug on an agreed discount to the NHS as per a patient access scheme from 2012. And they’ve done that for all other NICE accredited drugs as well. So, the other manufacturers that are making a different type of drug called Eylea, otherwise known as Aflibercept, which is another endothelial growth factor blocker, so it blocks VEGF-A which is in a different isoform such as VEGF-B and, also placental growth factor which is another molecule which is also found in the eye that stimulates the growth of endothelial cells. At, the moment, the two are used almost to the same level of efficacy. Aflibercept is also targeted at almost the same cost but it can be given slightly less frequently after the first five injections. So, we give them every two months, the Eylea. So, that allows a little bit of relief to the patient from having injections every month. And we’ve also mentioned steroid implants which can be used. Dexamethasone or Fluocinolone. Dexamethasone is thought to be a powerful drug but the effect is actually, much less than what’s stipulated on the bottle. They say, about six months, we think it’s about a month or two. However, Iluvien which is the latest steroid implant is supposed to last a lot longer but costs the same in total terms. So, the cost of Ozurdex is £870 whereas the cost of one injection of Iluvien is 5,500. And what the Iluvien manufacturers have done, they’ve basically taken three Ozurdexes per … over three years, that’s about nine times 800 and said right, well we’ll just come in at just a little bit above that. So, 5,400-5,500 that’s what Iluvien is costing now. There is a patient access scheme for Iluvien but it’s all a commercial confidential agreement which I don’t have information on unfortunately. Okay, I’m just going to be presenting a little bit about surgical treatment for these patients. So, what happens when the drugs don’t work, the 7 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk macular oedemas got worse or the proliferative changes have led on to vitreous haemorrhage or they need to have a vitrectomy basically. Which is basically removal of the vitreous humour and any opacities and membranes that are pulling on the retina. It also allows us to do further laser treatment for the detached retina treatment and further treatment of the macular oedema. And this is what traction on the retina can look like on an OCT … ooh, sorry. So, you’ve got membranes of the posterior hyaloid which is the back surface of the vitreous still stuck to the retina no doubt exacerbating the resolution and the improvement of the macular oedema. Can we dim the room lights a little bit because I might want to just give you a bit better contrast? Thanks very much for the video which should hopefully play. Now, if you’ve got a lot of opacity in the vitreous of the eye, this is your light, this is your vitrector instrument which sucks a small proportion of clotted fibrin and cuts it like a guillotine and removes it. So, we’re very, very gently trying to remove old vitreous haemorrhage that’s now looking very white. There’s a bit of a haemorrhagic, fresh haemorrhagic change there. And you’re basically working down an operating microscope looking at this in high resolution and high mag. There’s healthy or relatively healthy retina there and there’s clotted fibrin sitting on the retina that’s obviously, blocking the view for the patient which he obviously, can’t see very well through. And we’ve developed much, much, better instruments now that allows us to do bi-manual surgery. So, one hand actually, picks up the membrane, the other hand can cut it. That means you’ve got a chandelier that’s self-retaining in the eye which allows one hand to be used for dual function surgery. And basically, when you’ve got membranes on the retina you want to try and lift and cut them in the interface between the membrane and the slightly elevated retinas. You wanna be very, very careful not to damage the retina and not to leave too much behind. So, there is a fine balance in getting this appearance to look like that which improves the vision to about half way down the chart. Whereas previously they were obviously, just seeing the top letter. 8 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk And this treatment where the retina is detaching because the membranes can quite easily pull and lift-up the retina, which will cause a profound drop in vision. And what that refers to is tractional and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment. Which is the break in the retina that causes the retinal detachment. And that’s the post-op appearance where the disc is rather pale, the vessels are a little big occluded. So, the blood supply to the retina isn’t going to be very much improved but the vision does improve by removing the opacity and detachment. Okay, so just to summarise: It’s the leading cause of blinding in the working population. Early detection is no doubt very important and treatment with laser and with all different intravitreal drugs and adjuncts does lead to a prevent … improvement in vision. But we do still need to make sure our targets for screening all patients are being met. Because that’s the simplest, easiest way to prevent them getting to the end stage of the disease. Great. Put the lights on now. Thanks very much. END OF TRANSCRIPT 9 httPD://www.transcriptioncity.co.uk