Abstract
Anti-vascular endothelial growth factor drugs are the first-line treatment for diabetic macular edema (DME), although the mechanism of the visual acuity (VA) improvement remains largely unknown. The association between photoreceptor damage and visual impairment encouraged us to retrospectively investigate the changes in the foveal photoreceptors in the external limiting membrane (ELM) and ellipsoid zone (EZ) on spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) images in 62 eyes with DME treated with intravitreal ranibizumab (IVR) injections. The transverse lengths of the disrupted EZ and ELM were shortened significantly (P < 0.001 and P = 0.044, respectively) at 12 months. The qualitative investigation also showed restoration of the EZ and ELM lines on SD-OCT images. The EZ at 12 months lengthened in 34 of 38 eyes with discontinuous EZ and was preserved in 16 of 21 eyes with complete EZ at baseline. VA improvement was positively correlated with shortening of the disrupted EZ at 12 months (ρ = 0.463, P <0.001), whereas the decrease in central subfield thickness was associated with neither VA improvement nor changes in EZ status (ρ = 0.215, P = 0.093 and (ρ = 0.209, P = 0.103, respectively). These data suggested that photoreceptor restoration contributes to VA improvement after pro re nata treatment with IVR injections for DME independent of resolved retinal thickening.
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Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Introduction
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a leading cause of visual loss in patients of working age, and proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) and diabetic macular edema (DME) especially often threaten vision in patients with diabetes1,2. Diabetes promotes disruption of the blood-retinal barrier and deteriorates neuroglial function, although it remains to be elucidated how extravasated blood constituents exacerbate dysfunction of the individual neuroglial components in DME3,4,5.
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has multiple pathological and physiological effects, i.e., angiogenesis, vascular hyperpermeability, induction of DR-like vascular changes, prothrombotic or antithrombotic responses, and neuroprotection6,7,8,9,10,11,12. Both molecular and clinical investigations have allowed clinicians to administer anti-VEGF therapy to treat DME and improve visual prognoses. This first-line treatment reduces retinal vascular permeability and retinal thickness and has beneficial effects on DR progression, deposition of hard exudates, and the nonperfused areas in the macula13,14,15,16,17,18. Despite accumulating evidence regarding the efficacy on the retinal vasculature, it remains ill-defined how anti-VEGF drugs restore the neuronal components.
A recent study reported extensive production of reactive oxygen species in the photoreceptors in diabetic retinas19. Advances in spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) technology have increased the understanding of morphologic changes in individual retinal layers and their association with molecular mechanisms in chorioretinal diseases20,21. The photoreceptor status especially is represented by the ellipsoid zone (EZ) of the photoreceptors and the external limiting membrane (ELM), and disruption of these lines is related to visual impairment in macular edema in retinal vascular diseases including DME and retinal degenerative diseases22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30. A few studies have shown these biomarkers of the photoreceptor status as predictors of visual outcomes after anti-VEGF therapy31,32,33. However, the effects of anti-VEGF therapy on photoreceptor damage are controversial34,35,36.
In the current study, we qualitatively and quantitatively investigated the morphologic changes in the foveal photoreceptor markers, i.e., the EZ and ELM, after pro re nata (PRN) treatment with intravitreal ranibizumab (IVR) injections ((Lucentis®; Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland; Genentech Inc., South San Francisco, CA, USA) for DME and the association with visual acuity (VA) improvements.
Results
Photoreceptor restoration after IVR injections
We reviewed 62 eyes of 58 patients with center-involved DME treated with IVR injections. Among 118 eyes that met the eligible criteria, nine eyes were excluded at baseline. Forty-seven of the 109 included eyes were lost to follow-up before the 12-month examination. According to 3+ PRN regimen, 62 eyes received six (interquartile range [IQR], 4–9) injections for 12 months, and the logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) VA and central subfield (CSF) thickness improved from 0.260 (0.155–0.506) and 441 μm (397–524) at baseline to 0.155 (0.046–0.281) and 300 μm (268–379) at 12 months. The baseline systemic and ocular characteristics are shown in Table 1.
We evaluated the qualitative and quantitative changes in the photoreceptor status in 62 eyes with center-involved DME treated with IVR injections. The transverse length of the disrupted EZ at the fovea shortened significantly at 12 months (10.4% [0–31.6] vs. 0% [0–10.5], P < 0.001) (Fig. 1a), and the transverse length of the disrupted ELM also decreased significantly (P = 0.044) (Fig. 1b). Qualitative investigation showed that the number of eyes with the complete EZ gradually increased from 21 (33.9%) eyes at baseline to 37 (59.7%) eyes at 12 months compared to the decreased number of eyes with the discontinuous EZ, i.e., 38 (61.3%) eyes at baseline to 22 (35.5%) eyes at 12 months (Fig. 1c, Table 2). SD-OCT showed the complete ELM at the fovea in 44 and 52 eyes at baseline and 12 months, respectively (Fig. 1d, Table 2).
Of 21 eyes of the complete EZ group at baseline, 16 (76.2%) eyes had preserved intact EZ throughout the 12 months of follow-up, and only three (14.3%) eyes had the discontinuous EZ at 12 months (Figs 2a and 3a–d). The disappearance of the EZ line persisted in all three eyes with the absent EZ at baseline (Figs 2c and 3e–h). In contrast, the transverse length of the disrupted EZ decreased in most eyes (89.5%) with the discontinuous EZ (19.4% [10.4–42.8] and 1.3% [0.0–14.4] at baseline and 12 months, respectively) (Figs 2b and 4). Further, the decrease in the transverse length of the disrupted EZ at 12 months was correlated with the logMAR VA and the transverse length of the disrupted EZ and ELM at baseline, whereas there was no association with preoperative systemic parameters (Table 3). The shortening of the disrupted ELM at 12 months was associated with the baseline logMAR VA, CSF thickness, and the transverse length of the disrupted EZ and ELM (Table 4).
Association between VA improvement and photoreceptor restoration
A positive association was seen in all 62 eyes between the VA improvements and the decrease in the transverse length of the disrupted EZ or ELM at 12 months (ρ = 0.463, P < 0.001 or ρ = 0.311, P = 0.015, respectively; Fig. 5a,b), whereas there was no correlation between the changes in the logMAR VA and CSF thickness (ρ = 0.215, P = 0.093). Further multiple regression analysis with a forward stepwise approach also confirmed the association between VA improvement and the decrease in transverse length of the disrupted EZ (β = 0.438, P < 0.001). The VA improvement was related to the decreased disruption of the EZ in 38 eyes with the discontinuous EZ at baseline (ρ = 0.399, P = 0.015) (Fig. 5e). These data might be consistent with the association between the disrupted EZ or ELM and the logMAR VA at 12 months (Table 5). Further statistical analyses showed that the transverse length of the disrupted EZ or ELM at baseline was related to poorer visual outcomes and greater efficacy after IVR injections (Tables 6 and 7).
Discussion
Despite the definite efficacy of anti-VEGF drugs on VA, it remains largely unknown how anti-VEGF therapy ameliorates the neuroglial dysfunction in DME. In the current study, the quantitative investigation showed restoration of the foveal photoreceptors and the association with improved VA after administration of IVR injections to treat DME. The EZ status especially improved in most eyes with the discontinuous EZ at baseline and was preserved in most eyes with the complete EZ at baseline for the 1-year follow-up. These data suggested a novel therapeutic target for anti-VEGF therapies in the neuronal components and well-known targets in the retinal vascular lesions16,17,18. In addition, clinicians often see better VA when the macular edema recurs during PRN treatments, which might be explained partly by photoreceptor restoration after IVR injections. It suggested that the photoreceptor integrity could be a novel surrogate marker to evaluate the efficacy of IVR treatment with as-needed regimen.
The EZ, previously known as the third high-reflectance band or the junction between the inner and outer segments (IS/OS), clinically represents the photoreceptor integrity in several diseases22,24,25,26. The biological EZ is comprised mainly of mitochondria and enables higher levels of energy consumption in the photoreceptors. The absence of the EZ on SD-OCT images might correspond to the anatomic absence or the reduced OCT reflectivity of the EZ. This led us to hypothesize that the mitochondrial dysfunction in the foveal photoreceptors leads to reduced VA in DME. Although it remains ill-defined what blood constituents exacerbate photoreceptor damage, anti-VEGF treatment might block their extravasation with concomitant restoration of the EZ and outer segments on SD-OCT images34,37,38. In addition, anti-VEGF therapy might resolve foveal cystoid spaces, which seem to compress and deform the photoreceptor layers25.
The ELM is the junctional complex between the Müller and photoreceptor cells and has barrier properties against macromolecules39,40. The disrupted ELM might allow blood constituents to pour into the subretinal spaces and damage the photoreceptors, or vice versa, photoreceptor damage might lead to disruption of the ELM in DME37. The disrupted ELM was shortened modestly after anti-VEGF therapy, which caused speculation that blocking the neurotoxic blood constituents promotes restoration of the photoreceptors and shortening of the disrupted ELM reciprocally.
The statistical analyses suggested that the decrease in the disrupted EZ contributed to VA improvement independent of the reduced retinal thickness after IVR injections for DME (Fig. 5a,c). In contrast, modest associations were seen between the disrupted ELM and CSF thickness at baseline and 12 months and between decreases in the disrupted ELM and CSF thickness. Two possible explanations should be considered, i.e., damage in the Müller cells might contribute to both ELM disruption and inner retinal thickening39,41, and the disrupted barrier properties in the ELM might dysregulate the fluid dynamics and concomitantly allow accumulation of intraretinal or subretinal fluids42.
Generally, when neurons degenerate, they do not regenerate, as Ramon y Cajal proposed43. In contrast, many publications have reported neuronal regeneration in several situations44. We could not determine whether the morphologic restoration of the ELM and EZ on the SD-OCT images corresponded to regeneration of the photoreceptor cells. Most eyes with DME in which the ELM or EZ were disrupted have an outer nuclear layer (ONL) just above these lesions, although the ONL is comprised of the cellular bodies of the photoreceptor cells connected to the inner and outer segments26. This inconsistency suggests subcellular damage rather than complete cellular death as in synaptic pruning in neurons45. Thus, we might speculate that anti-VEGF treatment blocks neurotoxic blood constituents and allows restoration of the inner and outer segments from the surviving cell bodies of the photoreceptor cells in the ONL. It might be analogous to the disappearance and restoration of the EZ rather than the ONL in the acute zonal occult outer retinopathy complex compared to the loss of any photoreceptor layers in retinal degenerative diseases22,46,47. In contrast, three eyes with the absent EZ at baseline did not have improvements in the EZ status at 12 months and might share the common mechanisms with retinal degenerative diseases. However, another clinicopathological study using SD-OCT images should reveal the histologic correspondence in different diseases.
Among several therapeutic strategies, vitrectomy might be efficacious in eyes with DME and vitreomacular traction48. In addition, vitreoretinal abnormalities on OCT images and surface wrinkling retinopathy on color fundus photograph are factors predictive of poorer visual outcomes and efficacy after administration of IVR injections to treat DME49. A recent study showed that the number of eyes with the disrupted ELM increased from 37.5% at baseline to 56.3% at the final visit after vitrectomy, whereas the surgery allows clinicians to remove vitreomacular traction50. In this study, IVR decreased eyes with the disrupted ELM (from 29.0% at baseline to 16.1% at 12 months), but cannot treat the lesions at the vitreoretinal interface. These data might allow consideration of customized medicine to treat DME.
This retrospective study had limitations, with the first being the small number of cases. We applied the subjective quantification of photoreceptor damage, although the automatic measurements using image processing procedures generally improve the reproducibility and objectivity51,52,53. Compared to the degenerative processes of photoreceptors in geographic atrophy or retinitis pigmentosa, photoreceptor damage in DME is often accompanied with hyperreflective foci38. The automatic methods cannot completely discriminate such lesions from the fragmented EZ lines and therefore did not measure the EZ lines precisely. The images of the outer retinal layers often were affected by the hyperreflective lesions in the inner retinal layers, which suggested that the changes in the ELM and EZ might sometimes be artifacts. The modest correlation between the disrupted ELM and CSF thickness suggested that the inner retinal edema might block the faint reflective signals of the ELM (Table 7). Another study should determine if these results are generalizable to other populations, injection regimens, and imaging instruments.
In conclusion, we showed the beneficial effects of IVR treatment on foveal photoreceptor damage in DME, which suggested one of multiple mechanisms in VA improvement associated with this treatment and shed light on the path to customized medicine for patients with DME.
Methods
Participants
We retrospectively investigated the changes in foveal photoreceptor status at 12 months in 62 consecutive eyes of 58 patients with center-involved DME treated with IVR injections for 12 months or longer54. Patients with center-involved DME who visited Kyoto University Hospital from March 2014 to April 2015 as the baseline visit received IVR injections according to the 3+ PRN regimen. The exclusion criteria at baseline were media opacities affecting the VA, other chorioretinal diseases, treatment for DME within the previous 6 months, previous intraocular surgery other than cataract extraction, and cataract surgery within the previous 3 months. Further, several patients dropped out during the 12-month follow-up, because of patient’s inconvenience, patient desire to terminate treatment or change to other therapeutic strategies, drug tachyphylaxis, or additional treatments, i.e., focal/grid photocoagulation, panretinal photocoagulation, vitrectomy (for vitreous hemorrhage), or cataract surgery. All research and measurements adhered to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki. The institutional review board and the ethics committee of Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine approved the study protocol. All participants provided written informed consent before study enrollment.
Intervention
Ranibizumab (0.5 mg) was injected intravitreally according to the 3+ PRN regimen described in the Ranibizumab Monotherapy or Combined with Laser versus Laser Monotherapy for Diabetic Macular Edema (RESTORE) study14. After disinfection, ranibizumab was injected 3.5 mm posterior to the limbus followed by instillation of antibiotics. Three monthly ranibizumab injections were followed by the PRN injections according to the retreatment criteria of the RESTORE study14.
OCT
The best-corrected decimal VA was measured at all visits and converted to the logMAR VA for statistical analyses followed by comprehensive ophthalmic examinations. After calibration using the corneal curvature radii and refractive error, we obtained OCT images using SD-OCT (Spectralis OCT, Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany) at every monthly visit55. Vertical and horizontal sectional images dissecting the fovea were acquired using the cross-hair mode (30 degrees). This instrument has a high A-scan rate of 40,000 A-scans/second using a light source of approximately 870 nm, using the optical resolution of approximately 7 μm in depth (axial optical resolution) and 14 μm transversally (lateral optical resolution). Thirty-degree B-scan of the high resolution mode was composed of 1,536 A-scans with 3.5 μm digital axial resolution. Resultantly, the digital lateral resolution was 5.67 μm (5.52–5.81), which depended on the corneal curvature radii and refractive error in individual eyes. The number for image averaging was 20 to 100 to acquire better images. Three-dimensional images also were obtained using the raster scan mode, followed by the construction of two-dimensional maps and automatic quantification of the mean CSF thickness, as described previously56.
We qualitatively and quantitatively evaluated the foveal photoreceptor status using the two high-reflectance bands, EZ and ELM, on the vertical and horizontal sectional images at the monthly visits. We qualitatively categorized the status of these lines into complete, discontinuous, and absent as described previously22,24,38. Two retina specialists evaluated these markers of photoreceptor integrity. If they disagreed, a third specialist participated. We also quantified the transverse length of the disrupted EZ or ELM as previously reported25. Briefly, after the exclusion of the areas where reflectivity signals in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) were attenuated by media opacity or hyperreflective lesions in inner retinal layers, the areas with damaged photoreceptors were quantified. The EZ lines with various OCT reflectivity levels were divided into three categories; i.e., intact, faint, and disrupted. The ELM status was defined as intact or disrupted. We thus measured the transverse length of the areas where the EZ or ELM line was disrupted within the central 1 mm on the vertical and horizontal images using the caliper tool in the Heidelberg Eye Explorer software (Heidelberg Engineering). The average of the percentage was used in the following investigations.
Statistical analysis
The results are expressed as the median (IQR). The data were analyzed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test or the Mann-Whitney U-test to evaluate the differences between two groups. Spearman’s correlation coefficient was calculated to test the statistical correlation. We employed the multiple regression analysis with a stepwise forward approach (age, gender, the decrease in CSF thickness, and the decrease in the transverse length of the disrupted EZ as independent variables; VA improvement as a dependent variable). P < 0.05 was considered significant.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Mori, Y. et al. Restoration of foveal photoreceptors after intravitreal ranibizumab injections for diabetic macular edema. Sci. Rep. 6, 39161; doi: 10.1038/srep39161 (2016).
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Acknowledgements
This work was partially funded by the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (T.M.) (26462637).
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Y.M. wrote the manuscript; Y.M., K.S., U.A., K.I., S.Y., M.F., Y.D., T.Y., Y.M., and T.M. analyzed data; Y.M., K.S., U.A., K.I., and T.M. prepared figures; K.S., K.I., S.Y., and T.M. provided the conception and design of the research. K.S., U.A., K.I., S.Y., M.F., Y.D., T.Y., Y.M., and T.M. edited and reviewed the manuscript. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.
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Mori, Y., Suzuma, K., Uji, A. et al. Restoration of foveal photoreceptors after intravitreal ranibizumab injections for diabetic macular edema. Sci Rep 6, 39161 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep39161
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