posted 01/09/03
ACE inhibitors do not appear to stop retinopathy from
progressing from moderate to severe in type 2 diabetics, according to a recent
report.
Previous reports have suggested that ACE
inhibitor therapy delays the progression of early diabetic retinopathy, Dr.
Mayer B. Davidson and colleagues, from Charles R. Drew University in Los
Angeles, note in the November/December issue of the Journal of Diabetes and Its
Complications. However, it was unclear if such therapy would also be useful in
retarding the progression of more advanced forms of diabetic retinopathy.
In the current study, the researchers assessed
the outcomes of 35 normotensive type 2 diabetics with moderate to severe
diabetic retinopathy who were randomized to receive enalapril 5 mg/d or
multivitamin placebo daily for 2 years. The subjects were examined by an
ophthalmologist every 3 months.
Neither group experienced a significant change in
blood pressure or in HbA1C levels during the study, the authors point out.
Although the planned study duration was 2 years,
the trial was terminated after an average of 7.2 months when it became apparent
that enalapril therapy probably did not slow disease progression. By that time,
roughly equal numbers of patients in each group had progressed to proliferative
DR, macular edema, or had developed sustained proteinuria.
It is possible that treatment with higher doses
of enalapril would have produced a beneficial effect, the authors note. "Perhaps
larger studies using higher doses of ACE inhibitors in normotensive
patients...are needed over longer periods of time to see any effect of ACE
inhibitors on DR," they add.
Regardless, "further studies to evaluate complementary strategies other than control of glycemia and blood pressure are clearly warranted," the investigators state.
Source: Diabetes In Control Dot Com: J Diabetes Complications
2002;16:377-381
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