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Clinical Evidence of a Photoreceptor Origin in Diabetic Retinal Disease.

Abstract

CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Although diabetes is associated with a classic microvascular disease of the retina, it is also increasingly being recognized as a cause of retinal neuropathy. Preclinical evidence suggests that retinal neuropathy in diabetes manifests in part as photoreceptor dysfunction, preceding the development of vascular features in experimental models. It remains unknown whether such findings are relevant to patients with diabetes. METHODS: Here, we review 4 lines of clinical evidence suggesting that diabetes-associated photoreceptor pathology is linked to the development of retinal microvascular disease. RESULTS: First, a major population-based investigation of susceptibility loci for diabetic retinopathy (DR) implicated a photoreceptor protein product as a protective factor. Next, electroretinography and other studies of visual function collectively show that rod and/or cone-derived abnormalities occur decades before the development of vascular features of DR. Third, protection from DR seemingly develops in patients with coincident retinitis pigmentosa, as suggested by several case series. Finally, based on anatomic features, we propose that the beneficial effect of macular laser in DR occurs via ablation of diseased photoreceptors. CONCLUSIONS: The evidence we present is limited due to the small patient populations used in the studies we cite and due to the lack of methodologies that allow causative relationships to be inferred. Collectively, however, these clinical observations suggest that photoreceptors are involved in early diabetic retinal disease and may in fact give rise to the classic features of DR. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES: Proprietary or commercial disclosures may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article.

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