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Early Worsening of Diabetic Retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial

Early Worsening of Diabetic Retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial ObjectivesTo document the frequency, importance of, and risk factors for "early worsening" of diabetic retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT).MethodsThe DCCT was a multicenter, randomized clinical trial comparing intensive vs conventional treatment in insulin-dependent diabetic patients who had no to moderate nonproliferative retinopathy. Retinopathy severity was assessed in 7-field stereoscopic fundus photographs taken at baseline and every 6 months. For this study, worsening was defined as progression of 3 steps or more on the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study final scale, as the development of soft exudates and/or intraretinal microvascular abnormalities, as the development of clinically important retinopathy, or as any of the above, and was considered "early" if it occurred between baseline and 12-month follow-up visits.ResultsEarly worsening was observed at the 6- and/or 12-month visit in 13.1% of 711 patients assigned to intensive treatment and in 7.6% of 728 patients assigned to conventional treatment (odds ratio, 2.06; P<.001); recovery had occurred at the 18-month visit in 51% and 55% of these groups, respectively (P=.39). The risk of 3-step or greater progression from the retinopathy level present 18 months after entry into the trial was greater in patients who previously had had early worsening than in those who had not. However, the large long-term risk reduction with intensive treatment was such that outcomes in intensively treated patients who had early worsening were similar to or more favorable than outcomes in conventionally treated patients who had not. The most important risk factors for early worsening were higher hemoglobin A1clevel at screening and reduction of this level during the first 6 months after randomization. We found no evidence to suggest that more gradual reduction of glycemia might be associated with less risk of early worsening. Early worsening led to high-risk proliferative retinopathy in 2 patients and to clinically significant macular edema in 3; all responded well to treatment.ConclusionsIn the DCCT, the long-term benefits of intensive insulin treatment greatly outweighed the risks of early worsening. Although no case of early worsening was associated with serious visual loss, our results are consistent with previous reports of sight-threatening worsening when intensive treatment is initiated in patients with long-standing poor glycemic control, particularly if retinopathy is at or past the moderate nonproliferative stage. Ophthalmologic monitoring before initiation of intensive treatment and at 3-month intervals for 6 to 12 months thereafter seems appropriate for such patients. In patients whose retinopathy is already approaching the high-risk stage, it may be prudent to delay the initiation of intensive treatment until photocoagulation can be completed, particularly if hemoglobin A1cis high.THERE HAVE been many reports of the curious, unanticipated, and seemingly paradoxical worsening of diabetic retinopathy after rapid improvement of blood glucose control.Most of these reports have dealt with small groups of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in whom worsening was observed within 3 to 12 months after initiation of intensive insulin treatment. In some cases worsening was striking and led to permanent visual impairment,while in others it was transient and apparently benign.Worsening appeared to be more frequent and/or more severe when retinopathy was more advanced and diabetes was of longer duration, and when improvement in control was greater or more rapid. In some reports worsening occurred more frequently in women.In this report we call this phenomenon early worsening(EW).The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) was a multicenter, randomized clinical trial designed to assess the benefits and risks of intensive as compared with conventional diabetes treatment in persons with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus of 1 to 15 years' duration and with retinopathy at baseline ranging from none to the moderate nonproliferative stage.The DCCT has previously published results that documented the remarkable, long-term beneficial effects of intensive treatment in retarding the progression of retinopathy, despite an early adverse effect of EW in the intensive treatment group.This report examines the frequency and prognostic importance of EW and seeks to identify risk factors for its occurrence, separately in the intensive and conventional treatment groups.DESIGN AND METHODSELIGIBILITYDesign and methods have been presented in detailand summarizedpreviously. Briefly, major eligibility criteria were age of 13 to 39 years, insulin dependence as evidenced by deficient C-peptide secretion, general good health without hypertension or hypercholesterolemia, and willingness, after a detailed informed consent process, to accept random assignment to intensive or conventional treatment. The trial followed the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the institutional review boards for research in human subjects of the participating centers.Two groups of participants were enrolled: (1) a primary prevention cohort of 726 patients with diabetes of 1 to 5 years' duration, no retinopathy observed on color photographs, best-corrected visual acuity in each eye of 20/25 or better with the use of Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) charts, and urinary albumin excretion rate (AER) less than 40 mg/24 h; and (2) a secondary intervention cohort of 715 patients with diabetes of 1 to 15 years' duration, very mild (microaneurysms only) to moderate nonproliferative retinopathy, visual acuity in each eye of 20/32 or better, and urinary AER less than 200 mg/24 h.TREATMENTParticipants were randomly assigned to receive either conventional or intensive treatment. Conventional treatment consisted of 1 or 2 daily insulin injections, daily self-monitoring of urine or blood glucose levels, and diet and exercise education. The goals of treatment were freedom from symptoms of hyperglycemia and from severe or frequent hypoglycemia, as well as maintenance of normal growth and development and ideal body weight. Intensive treatment consisted of insulin administered 3 or more times daily by injection or an external pump, with doses adjusted according to self-monitored blood glucose levels measured at least 4 times per day and to anticipated diet intake and exercise. The goals were preprandial blood glucose levels of 3.8 to 6.7 mmol/L (70-120 mg/dL) and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level within the nondiabetic range (<6.05%).ASSESSMENT OF RETINOPATHYSeven-field stereoscopic color fundus photographs were taken by certified photographers every 6 months and were graded centrally (with graders masked to treatment) according to the ETDRS modification of the Airlie House classification. This classification provides a grade for the severity of each type of lesion of diabetic retinopathy for each eye. Grades for the various lesions were used to derive overall retinopathy severity levels for each patient according to the ETDRS final scale.Fundus photographs were also obtained at 3 months for the initial 389 patients enrolled in the trial, after which this assessment was dropped from the protocol.DEFINITIONS OF EWIn reports from other studies, worsening has been expressed variably as an increase of a specified amount along a severity scale,as the development of specific lesions such as soft exudates (SE; cotton-wool spots) and/or intraretinal microvascular abnormalities (IRMA; ie, dilated tortuous intraretinal vessels),and as clinically important progression with or without visual impairment.The time after initiation of intensive treatment at which worsening has been considered "early" has varied from 3 to 12 months.We used 4 definitions of EW: (1) progression of 3 steps or more on the ETDRS final scale (3-step or more EW); (2) development of SE and/or IRMA in participants free of both lesions at baseline (SE/IRMA EW); (3) development of clinically important retinopathy, defined as severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (SNPDR), proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR), or clinically significant macular edema (CSME), as defined in the ETDRS(clinically important EW); or (4) any EW, which was defined as present when any of the 3 other definitions of EW were present at a visit for a given patient. For each definition, EW was considered present if it was observed at the 6- and/or 12-month visit after randomization. The first 3 definitions are not mutually exclusive. The analysis of any 1 definition of EW included each patient who met the criteria for that definition, regardless of whether that patient also did or did not meet the criteria for other definitions of EW.To evaluate the longer-term clinical impact of EW, we analyzed rates of subsequent progression from the level of retinopathy present at the 18-month visit, using the criterion of progression by 3 or more steps on the ETDRS final scale sustained for 2 consecutive 6-month visits (sustained 3-step progression). The subsequent event was counted at the time of the first of the 2 consecutive "positive" visits. We also compared change in retinopathy severity between the baseline and 4-year visits in those with vs those without EW.STATISTICAL METHODSSimple proportions were computed to describe the prevalence of the 4 types of EW within the intensive and conventional treatment groups, stratified by the baseline retinopathy severity level, and then for all the baseline levels combined. Within each baseline retinopathy stratum, a logistic regression modelwas used to compute the maximum likelihood estimate of the log odds of EW in the intensive treatment group relative to the conventional treatment group. Analyses were adjusted for baseline retinopathy level stratified according to whether there was no baseline retinopathy (10/10 on the ETDRS scale), microaneurysms only (20/<20 or 20/20), or more severe retinopathy present (30/<30 or worse).The Wald χ2was used to assess the significance of individual regression coefficients, while the likelihood ratio χ2was used to assess the significance of the set of covariates simultaneously. The proportion of explained variation associated with a specific covariate is measured by the entropy (R2), computed as the ratio of the likelihood ratio or Wald χ2to the −2 log likelihood of the model with no covariates.Analyses were also conducted comparing EW vs no EW and intensive vs conventional treatment within different subgroups based on selected baseline covariates. The homogeneity of odds ratios (ORs) for intensive vs conventional treatment among strata was tested by means of a treatment×covariate interaction in the logistic model.These regression models were used to describe the expected probability of EW as a function of the reduction in HbA1cduring the first 6 months of intensive therapy. The actual models included regression coefficients for the intercept (β0) and 13 covariates (β1, . . . , β13). For an individual patient with covariate values (X1, . . . , X13), the estimated probability of EW is provided by P=(1+e−η)−1where η=(β0+X1β1+. . .+X13β13). In these models, X13is the value of the reduction in HbA1cfrom screening to the average at months 4 and 5. To describe the average risk of EW as a function of the reduction in HbA1c, these estimated probabilities were obtained for a hypothetical patient with the average value of the other covariates.For those with EW vs those without EW, the (crude) rate of progression by 3 or more steps relative to the retinopathy level at 18 months, expressed as a rate per 100 patient-years,was computed separately for each of the 3 baseline retinopathy strata (10, 20s, or ≥30), and then for all the strata combined. The relative risk of 3-step or more progression for those with EW relative to those without EW was computed by means of the proportional hazards regression model,and the log relative risk (log hazard ratio) was estimated via the regression coefficients. These proportional hazards analyses were performed separately within baseline retinopathy strata, and then for all strata combined, both with and without stratifying for the levels of retinopathy at month 18.The proportional hazards regression model was also used to compute the risk of 3-step or more progression in the intensive treatment group relative to the conventional treatment group, among those with EW and among those without EW, again separately within baseline retinopathy strata, and then for all the strata combined. Tests of significance were based on the likelihood ratio χ2. Additional analyses comparing the relative risks of intensive vs conventional treatment among those with vs those without EW were performed by testing for significant differences between the log of the relative risks by means of a standard ztest.The distribution of the number of steps of change in the level of retinopathy from that at baseline to that at year 4 was compared between those with EW and those without EW by means of the Mann-Whitney test,separately for each of the 2 treatment groups. These analyses were performed with and without stratification adjustment for the baseline levels of retinopathy. In the stratified analysis, the overall test of differences between those with and those without EW was obtained with the Wei-Lachin test of stochastic orderingamong the Mann-Whitney analyses within strata, using equal weights for each of the retinopathy strata. The data are summarized by presenting the proportion of patients whose retinopathy level at year 4 relative to the baseline level was better, the same, worse by 1 or 2 steps, or worse by 3 or more steps, separately among those with EW and among those without EW.The differences between the intensive vs conventional treatment groups were also examined, separately among those with EW and among those without EW, by means of the Mann-Whitney test, with and without stratification for baseline retinopathy levels. The Wei-Lachin testwas also used to test treatment group differences combined over strata and across those with and those without EW. Additionally, the Mann-Whitney difference between the groups was compared between those with EW and those without EW by means of a standard ztest.RESULTSBASELINE CHARACTERISTICSSelected baseline characteristics stratified by baseline retinopathy severity level are shown in Table 1. In retinopathy severity level 10/10 (the primary intervention cohort), the shorter duration of diabetes and the lower AER reflected the lower maximum values required for eligibility in this cohort. Within the secondary intervention cohort (levels 20/<20 and higher), duration of diabetes, AER, and prevalence of clinical neuropathy increased with increasing retinopathy severity, as expected.Table 1. Baseline Characteristics by Baseline Retinopathy Severity Level*See table graphicINCIDENCE OF AND RECOVERY FROM EWThe proportions of patients who experienced EW according to each definition at 6 and/or 12 months are presented in Table 2together with the ORs for the intensive vs conventional treatment groups. More patients in the intensive treatment group experienced EW than in the conventional treatment group, particularly at the 6-month visit. The occurrence of 3-step or more EW at the 6-month visit was almost 3 times greater in the intensive than the conventional treatment group: 3.5% (25/711) vs 1.2% (9/728), OR=2.98, P=.006. In the intensive group, 19 of these 25 cases had recovered to less than 3 steps worse at the next visit at month 12, while 6 of these 25 cases persisted. At the 12-month visit, 17 new cases were added, for a total of 23 (3.2%) in the intensive treatment group. In the conventional treatment group at 12 months, 5 of the 9 cases from 6 months had recovered, while 14 new cases were observed, for a total of 18 (2.5%). The total risk of 3-step or more EW at 6 and/or 12 months was 1.91 times greater in the intensive treatment group (P=.02), owing largely to the excess of cases observed at 6 months. Total recovery at the 18-month visit was 69% in the intensive vs 57% in the conventional treatment group (OR=1.56, P=.51). These rates were similiar to those observed at the subsequent visit when 3-step or more worsening from baseline occurred at any visit during follow-up, which were 72% and 51%, respectively; recovery at any future visit was 2.5 times as frequent with intensive as compared with conventional treatment (P<.01).Similar patterns of greater risk in the intensive group were observed with SE/IRMA EW, OR=2.41 (P<.001); clinically important EW, OR=1.57, P=.30; and with any EW, OR=2.06 (P<.001), while rates of recovery were similiar in both treatment groups.Table 2. Patients With Early Worsening at 6 and 12 Months and Recovery at Next VisitSee table graphicA similar analysis of any EW at the 3-month visit was conducted (data not shown) for the 389 patients who had 3-month photographs. The occurrence of any EW at the 3-month visit was 3.7 times greater in the intensive than the conventional treatment group: 10.7% (21/197) vs 3.6% (7/192), OR=3.7 (P=.005). The corresponding OR for any EW at 3 and/or 6 months was also 3.7 (P=.001). Approximately 50% of patients with any EW at 3 months had recovered at 6 months, and more than 60% of those with any EW at 3 or 6 months had recovered at 12 months.IMPACT OF CLINICALLY IMPORTANT EWAmong the 25 cases of clinically important EW at 6 or 12 months, there were 3 eyes of 2 patients with high-risk PDR. Both patients had moderate NPDR at baseline and were in the intensive treatment group. All 3 eyes were treated with scatter photocoagulation and the new vessels regressed. The patient with high-risk PDR in both eyes, first observed at 3 months, also had CSME accompanied by a decrease in visual acuity to 20/40 in each eye, with partial recovery (to 20/25 in each eye) after focal/grid photocoagulation. In 3 additional patients (2 in the intensive and 1 in the conventional treatment group), CSME accompanied by decreases in visual acuity of 1 to 4 lines developed in 4 eyes (3 with mild and 1 with moderate NPDR at baseline), with recovery to 20/20 or better in 3 eyes and to 20/30 in the fourth (after focal/grid photocoagulation in 2 eyes and spontaneously in 2 eyes).EW WITHIN RETINOPATHY SEVERITY SUBGROUPSTable 3presents the incidence and ORs of EW occurring at 6 or 12 months within subgroups of severity of retinopathy at baseline. Early worsening was most frequent when defined as development of SE/IRMA, and the frequency of this type of EW increased about 40-fold with increasing severity of baseline retinopathy. This steep increase was to be expected because development of SE/IRMA represents more substantial progression for eyes with no retinopathy than is the case for eyes that already have mild retinopathy. The percentage of patients with 3-step or more EW was substantially less than the percentage with SE/IRMA EW, and the occurrence of 3-step or more EW did not increase as markedly as a function of baseline retinopathy severity, at least in part because 3-step or more EW required a similar degree of worsening for all baseline severity levels.Table 3. Patients With Each Type of Early Worsening at 6 and/or 12 Months*See table graphicClinically important EW occurred almost exclusively in the 2 most severe baseline retinopathy categories, where its frequency was similar to that of 3-step or more EW. Of the 25 cases of clinically important EW occurring at 6 or 12 months, 16 also met the 3-step or more definition (14 with severe NPDR or PDR and 2 with CSME) and 9 had CSME without 3-step or more progression. Of the 25 cases, 9 were free of SE/IRMA at baseline, and 8 of these developed SE/IRMA EW.The ORs for intensive vs conventional treatment varied somewhat among the baseline severity categories, but the differences between categories were not significantly different (tests of homogeneity yielded Pvalues ranging from .50 to .83). Adjusting for the baseline level of retinopathy, ORs were 1.9 for 3-step or more EW, 2.4 for SE/IRMA EW, and 1.6 for clinically important EW.INCIDENCE OF EW WITHIN OTHER SUBGROUPSTable 4presents the incidence of any EW with intensive vs conventional treatment within patient subgroups defined by baseline factors. In no instance was the OR for intensive vs conventional treatment significantly different between baseline subgroups (interaction P≥.10). Among the like analyses for each definition of EW, only the difference between the ORs for SE/IRMA EW was nominally significant between men and women (1.6 in men vs 4.7 in women, P=.03, compared with 2.4 overall), excluding 23 women who were pregnant at 6 or 12 months (data not shown).Table 4. Prevalence of Any Early Worsening and Odds Ratios for Intensive vs Conventional Treatment Within Subgroups Defined by Baseline Factors*See table graphicTable 4also indicates that the risk of any EW increased significantly with increasing levels of screening HbA1cand duration of diabetes within both treatment groups, and with increasing levels of AER in the intensive treatment group.PROGNOSTIC SIGNIFICANCE OF EW FOR SUBSEQUENT RETINOPATHY PROGRESSIONFigure 1presents the cumulative incidence of sustained 3-step or more progression (ie, present at 2 or more consecutive 6-month visits) from the level present at the 18-month visit within each treatment group for patients who had and those who had not experienced 3-step or more EW. In the conventional treatment group, after an additional 5 years of follow-up, approximately 58% of those with 3-step or more EW would have subsequently experienced a further sustained progression of retinopathy, compared with 26% among those without such EW (Figure 1, left). In the intensive treatment group (Figure 1, right), approximately 20% of those with 3-step or more EW would have had subsequent progression, compared with 5% among those without such EW.Figure 1.Cumulative incidence of sustained 3-step or more progression from the level of retinopathy present at 18 months for those with and those without 3-step or more early worsening. Left, Conventional treatment group. Right, Intensive treatment group.Table 5presents rates of sustained 3-step or more progression of retinopathy from the level present at the 18-month visit for patients who had and those who had not experienced EW according to each definition. In addition to the crude rates, the adjusted relative risk of subsequent progression was computed comparing those with and those without previous EW, with adjustment for the actual level of retinopathy present at 18 months. For 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW, in both treatment groups, progression rates were higher in participants who had experienced EW. Overall, the risk of subsequent progression was 1.9 to 4.1 times greater among those with 3-step or more EW or SE/IRMA EW; these relative risks were not significantly different between the treatment groups (data not shown).Table 5. Sustained 3-Step or More Progression From the Level of Retinopathy Observed at 18 Months With RR for Those With and Without Early Worsening Within Each Treatment Group, and With RR for Intensive vs Conventional Treatment Within Each Category of Early Worsening*See table graphicFor clinically important EW (Table 5), in the conventional treatment group, there was a similar 2-fold increase in risk of subsequent progression in participants with vs those without such EW, although this was not significant after adjusting for the level of retinopathy at 18 months. Within the intensive treatment group, there was no increased risk of subsequent progression among those with clinically important EW.Comparison of rates of subsequent progression between the intensive and the conventional treatment groups (Table 5) shows the striking beneficial effect of intensive treatment, even in patients who experienced EW. Among those with 3-step or more EW (Table 5), the overall risks of subsequent progression with intensive and conventional treatment were 4.49 and 15.29 per 100 patient-years, respectively. The corresponding relative risk (intensive-conventional) is 0.35 (P=.03), which represents a 65% reduction in risk. Among those without 3-step or more EW, there was an 84% risk reduction with intensive treatment (1.04 vs 5.95 per 100 patient-years; P<.001). These risk reductions with intensive vs conventional treatment (65% vs 84%) are not significantly different (P=.12), which indicates that the relative benefit of intensive vs conventional treatment was not significantly different between those with and those without EW.In fact, the risk of subsequent progression was significantly less among intensively treated patients withEW than among conventionally treated patients withoutEW for SE/IRMA EW (P=.03 for 1.78 vs 5.22 per 100 patient-years), clinically important EW (P=.03 for 1.39 vs 7.11 per 100 patient-years), and any EW (P<.001 for 2.33 vs 5.75 per 100 patient-years), but not for 3-step or more EW.RETINOPATHY STATUS AT 4 YEARSAn alternate approach, which takes into consideration both the change occurring between baseline and 18 months and that occurring subsequently, is to consider the change between baseline and a fixed, long-term follow-up visit. For this purpose, we chose the change from baseline to 4 years, when the greatest number of subjects had long-term follow-up. Table 6presents a summary of the distributions of the degree of change in retinopathy severity between the baseline and 4-year visits for participants with and without EW, according to each of the definitions. For participants with 3-step or more EW, mean change was about 4 steps worse in the conventional treatment group and about 2 steps worse in the intensive treatment group, compared with 1.1 and 0.6 steps worse, respectively, in these treatment groups among those without 3-step or more EW.Table 6. Change in Retinopathy Level Between Baseline and 4-Year Visit for Patients With and Without Early Worsening by Treatment Group*See table graphicAnalysis of the mean number of steps worse reflects the distance along the scale under the assumption of equal intervals of retinopathy severity between steps, but because the intervals cannot be assumed to be equal, statistical tests were not performed on the differences between these means. Instead, differences are presented between the EW and no EW groups in the estimated probability that participants in the specified group would have a less favorable outcome (more steps of worsening or fewer steps of improvement) compared with participants in the other group (the Mann-Whitney difference, EW−no EW). The Mann-Whitney difference is an appropriate statistic for use with the ordinal retinopathy severity scale because the actual number of steps of difference along the scale is not considered, only their relative ordering. If the distributions among those with and without EW were identical (the null hypothesis), then the Mann-Whitney difference on average would be 0.For 3-step or more EW, the Mann-Whitney difference (stratified-adjusted for baseline retinopathy category) was 0.63 in the conventional treatment group and 0.54 in the intensive treatment group, indicating substantially greater probability of retinopathy progression between baseline and 4 years in patients with EW in both treatment groups. The difference between the 2 treatment groups was not significant (P=.38).Likewise, there was more progression in participants with than in those without SE/IRMA EW. The increase in the degree of progression among those with vs without SE/IRMA EW was smaller in the intensive than in the conventional treatment group (P=.04 for 0.63 vs 0.45).Most clinically important EW occurred in the most severe baseline retinopathy category (Table 3) and was associated with a less favorable outcome at the 4-year visit only in the conventional treatment group (Table 6) (overall, P<.001 for Mann-Whitney difference of 0.79 in the conventional group vs 0.14 in the intensive group). Among those with such clinically important EW in the intensive group, 62% (8/13) recovered at 4 years to a level the same as or better than that at baseline, vs 18% (2/11) of those in the conventional group.As with 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW, in both treatment groups, those with any EW had a less favorable retinopathy status at 4 years than those without any EW; the difference between treatment groups was not significant (P=.38 for 0.49 vs 0.34).BASELINE PREDICTORS OF EARLY WORSENINGTable 7presents logistic regression models for the risk (OR) of any EW as a function of a set of baseline characteristics (selected a priori) separately for the intensive and conventional treatment groups. Since the results were similar for each type of EW, only the models for any EW are presented. Within each treatment group, the screening (before randomization) level of HbA1cwas among the most important predictors of EW, as reflected by the relative magnitude of the R2value for each covariate. The increased risk associated with more severe retinopathy at baseline was contributed mostly by cases of SE/IRMA EW (as expected from Table 3). The risk of EW also tended to increase with increasing duration of diabetes (in both cohorts and both treatment groups) and to decrease in women in the conventional treatment group.Table 7. Logistic Regression Analysis of Odds of Any Early Worsening as a Function of Baseline Covariates Only*See table graphicREDUCTION IN HbA1cLEVEL AND RISK OF EWFigure 2shows the distribution of the change in HbA1clevel from the screening visit to the 6-month visit in each treatment group. In the conventional treatment group, the level of HbA1cremained relatively unchanged; more than 60% were within 0.2 of their initial level and less than 10% had a reduction of 2 or more HbA1cpercent.In the intensive treatment group, the levels of HbA1cfell rapidly during the first 3 months of treatment.Figure 2.Spline-smoothed estimates of the distribution of the reduction in hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) level at 6 months from the level of HbA1cat screening in the conventional and the intensive treatment groups (negative values represent increases in HbA1clevel). The density estimate is the estimated integrand such that the total area under each curve is 1.0. Note that nearly one half of intensively treated patients had a reduction of 2 U or more, while few conventionally treated patients did so.At the 6-month visit, the median reduction in HbA1clevel from the value at screening was 1.8, with lower and upper quartiles of 1.0 and 3.0 HbA1cpercent. The change in HbA1clevel from screening to 6 months, however, was highly associated with the initial screening value; those entering the trial with the highest screening HbA1cvalues experienced the greatest reduction in HbA1cwith intensive therapy.Crude rates of any EW are depicted in Figure 3as a function of the tertiles of screening HbA1cvalues, and within these, in tertiles of the month 6 reduction in HbA1c, separately for the intensive and conventional treatment groups. As the figure is scanned from front to back, examining increasing reductions in HbA1camong subgroups with similar screening HbA1clevels, rather steep increases in the incidence of EW are seen. Scanning across the figure from right to left, examining increasing levels of HbA1cat screening among subgroups with similar reductions, there are less steep and less consistent increases in the incidence of EW. Even though the reductions in HbA1cwere not as great among conventionally treated patients, the crude risks of EW in this treatment group appeared comparable with those in intensively treated patients who had equivalent reductions in HbA1c.Figure 3.Proportion of patients in the intensive and conventional treatment groups experiencing any early worsening within tertiles (thirds) of the distribution of the screening hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) value and, for each, within tertiles of the distribution of the month 6 reduction in HbA1clevel from the initial screening value.The relationships of EW to screening HbA1cand reduction of HbA1cduring the first 6 months of treatment were further explored by means of logistic regression models. Since the screening HbA1cis included in these models, the estimated OR, Pvalue, and R2values will be identical for the effect of an individual follow-up HbA1cvalue (eg, at month 3) and that of the change from the screening HbA1c(eg, from screening to month 3). Models in the conventional treatment group showed that the reduction in HbA1cat the 3- and 6-month visits, either individually or in aggregate, did not add significantly (P>.88) to the contribution of the screening HbA1cand other baseline covariates to the risk of either 3-step or more EW or SE/IRMA EW.Initial models in the intensive group examined the effects of the HbA1cvalues at each month (months 1-6), when adjusted for the other baseline covariates. In combination, the first 6 monthly HbA1clevels added significantly to the model for the risk of 3-step or more EW (P=.05) and to the model for SE/IRMA EW (P=.006), but not to the model for clinically important EW (P=.33). The effects of these HbA1cmeasures were also examined individually and in various combinations, including the slope of the decrease during the first 3 months and during the entire 6 months. Of these, the month 4 and month 5 HbA1cvalues accounted for most of the association with the risk of 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW. Therefore, subsequent analyses used the mean of the month 4 and 5 values for each subject, designated as the month 4-5 value. We then explored the relative contributions of the screening HbA1cvalue, the month 4-5 value, and the change in HbA1cfrom screening to month 4-5. Of these, the change from screening to month 4-5 was most important.Models that include the screening HbA1cand change from screening to month 4-5, in addition to the other baseline covariates, are presented in Table 8for the risks of 3-step or more EW, SE/IRMA EW, and any EW in the intensive treatment group. Comparison of the any EW panel with the intensive treatment group model in Table 7shows results that are almost identical, except that the reduction in HbA1chas replaced the screening HbA1cvalue as an important risk factor. The effect of screening HbA1cis not significant because this effect is in part absorbed into the effect of the change at months 4-5, which depends on the screening value itself. For those with a screening HbA1clevel of 7%, the range of HbA1creductions at month 4-5 spanned only 0% to 2%, while the range for those with a screening HbA1cof 10% spanned 0% to 4.6% (2% and 4.6% being the 95th percentiles of the respective distributions of reduction of HbA1c).Table 8. Logistic Regression Analysis of Odds of Early Worsening as a Function of Baseline Covariates and Change in HbA1c: Intensive Treatment*See table graphicIn these models, for each unit decrease in mean HbA1cpercentage at month 4-5 from the value at screening, there was a 1.6-fold increase in the risk of any EW, a 1.5-fold increase in the risk of 3-step or more EW, and a 1.7-fold increase in the risk of SE/IRMA EW. This risk gradient for 3-step or more EW is depicted in Figure 4, left, separately for the primary and secondary cohorts. The corresponding risk gradients for SE/IRMA EW are presented in Figure 4, right. Each figure is based on the means of the covariate values. For a patient with different values of the other covariates, the risks (odds) of EW would be proportional to those presented in the figures.Figure 4.Probability of early worsening defined as 3-step or more progression (left) and soft exudates/intraretinal microvascular abnormalities (right) in the intensive treatment group for the primary (dashed line) and the secondary (solid line) cohorts as a function of the month 4 to 5 average reduction in hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) level from the level at screening estimated from the logistic regression models (adjusted for the mean values of other covariates) in Table 8. The respective regression coefficients corresponding to the average reduction in HbA1clevel were 0.38 (left) and 0.53 (right). The intercepts in the left panel were −4.49 (primary cohort) and −3.61 (secondary cohort). The intercepts in the right panel were −6.62 (primary cohort) and −2.99 (secondary cohort). These intercepts include all other covariate effects evaluated at their mean values.Although the goal for all patients assigned to intensive treatment was the rapid achievement of normoglycemia, there was considerable variability in the time course of the reduction in HbA1coccurring between the initial screening, baseline evaluation, and 6-month visits in both intensively and conventionally treated patients. Therefore, post hoc, we compared the incidence of EW in groups of patients whose HbA1clevel decreased at different rates. We calculated reductions in each of 3 time intervals (screening to baseline, baseline to month 3, and month 3 to month 6), summed these reductions (ignoring any increases), and cross-classified patients by the total reduction in HbA1cand by the time course of the reduction. For convenience, and to provide adequate numbers in each cell, total reduction was divided into intervals that approximated 2 to 3, 3 to 4, and 4 or more HbA1cpercent (1.75%-2.74%, 2.75%-3.74%, and ≥3.75%; patients with <1.75% reduction were excluded from this analysis). Time course was defined by the percentage of the total reduction in HbA1cthat occurred in any single interval (shorter time course, ≥80.00%; intermediate time course, 60.00%-79.99%; longer time course, <60.00%). With these definitions, 80% of the 258 patients in the shorter interval category had 80% or more of their total reduction in the baseline to month 3 interval, while 22% of the 170 patients in the longer interval category had their total reductions spread fairly evenly across all 3 intervals (ie, had ≥20% of the total in each interval) and nearly all of the remainder had 80% or more of the reduction spread across 2 adjacent intervals (screening to 3 months in 42% and baseline to 6 months in 44%). Table 9presents the proportions of patients (intensive and conventional treatment groups combined) in each of the resulting 9 subgroups who developed any EW. There was no consistent relationship between the rapidity of HbA1cdecrease and the frequency of EW.Table 9. Number and Percentage of Patients With Any EW by Magnitude and Time Course of Reduction in HbA1c*See table graphicCOMMENTPROGNOSTIC IMPORTANCE OF EWThe risk of further sustained 3-step or more progression from the retinopathy level present at 18 months was 2 to 4 times greater in patients who had had 3-step or more EW or SE/IRMA EW vs those who had not (Table 5). However, the large risk reduction of intensive vs conventional treatment observed overallwas present to a similar degree among those who developed EW and those who did not. For SE/IRMA EW, clinically important EW, and any EW, the long-term risk of progression in intensively treated patients who developed EW was actually less than that in conventionally treated patients who did not. An analysis of change in retinopathy between the baseline and 4-year visits also showed more progression in patients with EW than in those without it when comparisons were made within treatment groups, as well as less progression in the intensive vs the conventional treatment groups when comparisons were made among those with and those without EW (Table 6). However, in this analysis, outcome in intensively treated patients who developed EW tended to be similiar to that in conventionally treated patients who did not. Thus, the phenomenon of EW indicates a poorer retinopathic prognosis, yet one that can still be greatly mitigated by long-term intensive treatment.RISK FACTORS FOR EWThe most consistent baseline risk factor for EW was the screening level of HbA1cobtained at the initial contact with each patient (OR for any EW of 1.6 for each unit increase in HbA1cpercent at screening in the intensive treatment group and 1.3 in the conventional treatment group; Table 7).The decrease in HbA1cduring the first 6 months of intensive treatment was also a risk factor for 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW. It was difficult to separate this effect from that of the screening level of HbA1c, because the decrease was greatest in patients who entered with the highest levels at screening. Thus, a higher initial value of the screening HbA1cwas associated with a greater reduction in HbA1c, which in turn was associated with increased risk of EW (Figure 3). In the conventional treatment group, few patients experienced a substantial decrease in HbA1c(Figure 2), and in this group the levels of HbA1cduring the first 6 months of the trial did not add significantly to the screening HbA1cand other risk factors in predicting EW (data not shown). In the intensive treatment group, regression analyses incorporating both screening HbA1cand change between the screening and month 4-5 values showed the latter to be the dominant risk factor for 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW (Table 8). Overall, after adjusting for the screening level of HbA1cand other factors, for every unit reduction in HbA1cpercent at month 4-5 with intensive therapy, there was a 47% increase in the odds of 3-step or more EW and a 69% increase in the odds of SE/IRMA EW.Others have also found the level of hyperglycemia at baseline and the magnitude of its reduction after improved control to be the predominant risk factors for EW,and the suggestion has frequently been made that the risk might be decreased by improving control more slowly. We could not address this question directly (to do so would require a randomized study), but we were able to compare the incidence of EW in those patients who experienced nearly all of the reduction in the first 3 months after baseline with those in whom the reduction was spread across an interval of 6 to 9 months, simultaneously controlling for the total amount of reduction in HbA1c. In this analysis, we found no evidence to support the suggestion that HbA1creduction across a longer interval was associated with less risk of EW than a reduction during a shorter interval, when the reductions were of comparable magnitude. Moreover, in the regression models, the slope of the decrease in HbA1cduring the first 3 or 6 months of treatment was a less powerful predictor of EW than was the month 4-5 level.CLINICALLY IMPORTANT EWThe cases we have classified as clinically important EW were similar to those observed in other clinical trials that included patients with moderate NPDR in that progression, though clinically important, was not catastrophic.High-risk PDR developed in only 3 eyes, all of which responded well to scatter photocoagulation. In 6 eyes CSME led to small decreases in visual acuity, with recovery to 20/20 or better in 3 eyes, to 20/25 in 2, and to 20/30 in 1. Others have reported case series in which there was more serious progression, sometimes leading to substantial loss of vision.The cases in each of these reports differed from those in the DCCT and similar trials in that retinopathy was more severe and/or blood glucose control was poorer at baseline (and thus the decrease after initiation of intensive insulin treatment was greater).PATHOGENESIS OF EWAlthough our analyses provide strong documentation of the importance of the magnitude of the decrease in HbA1cas a risk factor for EW (Figure 4and Table 8), they do not advance the debate regarding the specific pathogenesis of EW. Early worsening tended to occur earlier (Table 2) and recovery from it to be more frequent (Tables 2 and 5) in intensively treated than in conventionally treated patients, but we found no other distinguishing features. Possible mechanisms of EW suggested by others have included decrease in nutrient substrate, decreased ability of the retinal circulation to autoregulate, and increase in growth factors.CONCLUSIONSIn our analyses the magnitude, but not the rapidity, of the reduction in HbA1cduring the first 6 months of intensive treatment was an important risk factor for EW. Intensive treatment led to an approximately 2-fold increase in the risk of EW (Table 3), which in turn increased the risk of subsequent retinopathy progression 2- to 4-fold (Table 5). However, the remarkable ultimate beneficial effect of long-term intensive treatment outweighed these risks, so that retinopathy progression between the baseline and 4-year visits was no greater even in intensively treated patients who experienced EW than in conventionally treated patients who did not, and the risk of progression from the retinopathy level present at the 18-month visit tended to be less in the former group than in the latter. Thus, as previously recommended,intensive treatment should be implemented in all appropriate patients, with the expectation that the long-term risks of retinopathy progression, and the risks of the other microvascular complications of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, will be substantially reduced.However, whereas no case of EW was associated with serious visual loss in the DCCT, our results are consistent with previous reports of the occurrence of sight-threatening worsening when intensive treatment is initiated in patients with long-standing poor glycemic control, particularly if retinopathy is at or past the moderate nonproliferative stage.Ophthalmologic monitoring before initiation of intensive treatment and at 3-month intervals for 6 to 12 months thereafter would seem to be appropriate for such patients. In patients whose retinopathy is already approaching the high-risk stage (very severe NPDR or early PDR), it may be prudent to delay the initiation of intensive treatment until photocoagulation can be completed, particularly if HbA1clevel is high and a large reduction is anticipated.DDanemanALDrashLALobesDJBeckerLMBakerLBTravisProgressive retinopathy with improved control in diabetic dwarfism (Mauriac's syndrome).Diabetes Care.1981;4:360-365.JEPucklinWVTamborlanePFeligMGenelRSSherwinInfluence of long-term insulin infusion pump treatment of type 1 diabetes on diabetic retinopathy.Ophthalmology.1982;89:735-747.PMLawsonMCChampionCCannyRKingsleyMCWhiteContinuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) does not prevent progression of proliferative and preproliferative retinopathy.Br J Ophthalmol.1982;66:762-766.Evan BallegooieJMHooymansZTimmermanRapid deterioration of diabetic retinopathy during treatment with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion.Diabetes Care.1984;7:236-242.JRLawrenceGJBedfordRThomsonRapid development during puberty of proliferative retinopathy after strict control.Lancet.1985;2:332.PDandonaJPBolgerFBoagVFonescaJDAbramsRapid development and progression of proliferative retinopathy after strict diabetic control.Br Med J (Clin Res Ed).1985;290:895-896.TLauritzenKFrost-LarsenHWLarsenTDeckertSteno Study GroupEffect of one year of near-normal blood glucose levels on retinopathy in insulin-dependent diabetics.Lancet.1983;1:200-204.TLauritzenKFrost-LarsenHWLarsenTDeckertTwo-year experience with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion in relation to retinopathy and neuropathy.Diabetes.1985;34:74-79.The Kroc Collaborative Study GroupBlood glucose control and the evolution of diabetic retinopathy and albuminuria.N Engl J Med.1984;311:365-372.The Kroc Collaborative Study GroupDiabetic retinopathy after two years of intensified insulin treatment.JAMA.1988;260:37-41.KDahl-JorgensenOBrinchmann-HansenKFHanssenKFSandvikOAagenaesAker Diabetes GroupRapid tightening of blood glucose control leads to transient deterioration of retinopathy in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: the Oslo Study.Br Med J (Clin Res Ed).1985;290:811-815.OBrinchmann-HansenKDahl-JorgensenKFHanssenLSandvikOslo Study GroupEffects of intensified treatment on various lesions of diabetic retinopathy.Am J Ophthalmol.1985;100:644-653.OBrinchmann-HansenKDahl-JorgensenKFHannsenLSandvikThe response of diabetic retinopathy to 41 months of multiple insulin injections, insulin pumps, and conventional insulin therapy.Arch Ophthalmol.1988;106:1242-1246.HFunatsuHYamashitaYOhashiTIshigakiEffect of rapid glycemic control on progression of diabetic retinopathy.Jpn J Ophthalmol.1992;36:356-367.C-DAgardhBEckertEAgardhIrreversible progression of severe retinopathy in young type I insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients after improved metabolic control.J Diabetes Complications.1992;6:96-100.UGudatEChantelauRapid-progressive diabetische Retinopathie bei Stoffwechselnormalisierung: wer ist gefährdet?Z Klin Med.1992;47:108-113.TKRoysarkarAGuptaRJDashMRDograEffect of insulin therapy on progression of retinopathy in noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.Am J Ophthalmol.1993;115:569-574.EMoskaletsGGalstyanEStarostinaMAntisiferovEChantelauAssociation of blindness to intensification of glycemic control in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.J Diabetes Complications.1994;8:45-50.The DCCT Research GroupThe Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT): design and methodologic considerations for the feasibility phase.Diabetes.1986;35:530-545.The DCCT Research GroupDiabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT): update.Diabetes Care.1990;13:427-433.Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research GroupThe effect of intensive treatment of diabetes on the development and progression of long-term complications of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.N Engl J Med.1993;329:977-986.Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research GroupThe effect of intensive diabetes treatment on the progression of diabetic retinopathy in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.Arch Ophthalmol.1995;113:36-51.Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research GroupGrading diabetic retinopathy from stereoscopic color fundus photographs: an extension of the modified Airlie House classification.ETDRS report number 10.Ophthalmology.1991;98:786-806.PMcCullaghJANelderGeneralized Linear Models.2nd ed. New York, NY: Chapman & Hall; 1989:98-123.ELKornRSimonExplained residual variation, explained risk, and goodness of fit.Am Statistician.1991;45:201-206.NEBreslowNEDayStatistical Methods in Cancer Research, Volume II: The Design and Analysis of Cohort Studies.Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer; 1987:48-53.JDKalbfleischRLPrenticeThe Statistical Analysis of Failure Time Data.New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons Inc; 1980:70-118.JMLachinSome large sample distribution-free estimators and tests for multivariate partially incomplete observations from two populations.Stat Med.1992;11:1151-1170.DCCT Research GroupThe relationship of glycemic exposure (HbA1c) to the risk of development and progression of retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial.Diabetes.1995;44:968-983.DCCT Research GroupImplementation of treatment protocols in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial.Diabetes Care.1995;18:361-375.JTErnestTKGoldstickRLEngermanHyperglycemia impairs retinal oxygen autoregulation in normal and diabetic dogs.Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci.1983;24:985-989.EMKohnerMSleightholmTFallonWhy does retinopathy deteriorate when diabetic control is improved?Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci.1987;29(suppl):244.JEGrunwaldAJBruckerSSSchwartzDiabetic glycemic control and retinal blood flow.Diabetes.1990;39:602-607.JEGrunwaldCERivaBLPetrigStrict control of glycaemia: effects on blood flow in the large retinal vessels and in the macular microcirculation.Br J Ophthalmol.1995;79:735-741.Accepted for publication February 5, 1998.The DCCT is sponsored by the Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases of the National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md, through cooperative agreements and a research contract. Additional support was provided by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Eye Institute, and the General Clinical Research Center Program of the National Institute for Research Resources, Bethesda, Md.Reprints: The DCCT Research Group, Box NDIC/DCCT, Bethesda, MD 20892. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png JAMA Ophthalmology American Medical Association

Early Worsening of Diabetic Retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial

JAMA Ophthalmology , Volume 116 (7) – Jul 1, 1998

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American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright 1998 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS Restrictions Apply to Government Use.
ISSN
2168-6165
eISSN
2168-6173
DOI
10.1001/archopht.116.7.874
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Abstract

ObjectivesTo document the frequency, importance of, and risk factors for "early worsening" of diabetic retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT).MethodsThe DCCT was a multicenter, randomized clinical trial comparing intensive vs conventional treatment in insulin-dependent diabetic patients who had no to moderate nonproliferative retinopathy. Retinopathy severity was assessed in 7-field stereoscopic fundus photographs taken at baseline and every 6 months. For this study, worsening was defined as progression of 3 steps or more on the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study final scale, as the development of soft exudates and/or intraretinal microvascular abnormalities, as the development of clinically important retinopathy, or as any of the above, and was considered "early" if it occurred between baseline and 12-month follow-up visits.ResultsEarly worsening was observed at the 6- and/or 12-month visit in 13.1% of 711 patients assigned to intensive treatment and in 7.6% of 728 patients assigned to conventional treatment (odds ratio, 2.06; P<.001); recovery had occurred at the 18-month visit in 51% and 55% of these groups, respectively (P=.39). The risk of 3-step or greater progression from the retinopathy level present 18 months after entry into the trial was greater in patients who previously had had early worsening than in those who had not. However, the large long-term risk reduction with intensive treatment was such that outcomes in intensively treated patients who had early worsening were similar to or more favorable than outcomes in conventionally treated patients who had not. The most important risk factors for early worsening were higher hemoglobin A1clevel at screening and reduction of this level during the first 6 months after randomization. We found no evidence to suggest that more gradual reduction of glycemia might be associated with less risk of early worsening. Early worsening led to high-risk proliferative retinopathy in 2 patients and to clinically significant macular edema in 3; all responded well to treatment.ConclusionsIn the DCCT, the long-term benefits of intensive insulin treatment greatly outweighed the risks of early worsening. Although no case of early worsening was associated with serious visual loss, our results are consistent with previous reports of sight-threatening worsening when intensive treatment is initiated in patients with long-standing poor glycemic control, particularly if retinopathy is at or past the moderate nonproliferative stage. Ophthalmologic monitoring before initiation of intensive treatment and at 3-month intervals for 6 to 12 months thereafter seems appropriate for such patients. In patients whose retinopathy is already approaching the high-risk stage, it may be prudent to delay the initiation of intensive treatment until photocoagulation can be completed, particularly if hemoglobin A1cis high.THERE HAVE been many reports of the curious, unanticipated, and seemingly paradoxical worsening of diabetic retinopathy after rapid improvement of blood glucose control.Most of these reports have dealt with small groups of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in whom worsening was observed within 3 to 12 months after initiation of intensive insulin treatment. In some cases worsening was striking and led to permanent visual impairment,while in others it was transient and apparently benign.Worsening appeared to be more frequent and/or more severe when retinopathy was more advanced and diabetes was of longer duration, and when improvement in control was greater or more rapid. In some reports worsening occurred more frequently in women.In this report we call this phenomenon early worsening(EW).The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) was a multicenter, randomized clinical trial designed to assess the benefits and risks of intensive as compared with conventional diabetes treatment in persons with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus of 1 to 15 years' duration and with retinopathy at baseline ranging from none to the moderate nonproliferative stage.The DCCT has previously published results that documented the remarkable, long-term beneficial effects of intensive treatment in retarding the progression of retinopathy, despite an early adverse effect of EW in the intensive treatment group.This report examines the frequency and prognostic importance of EW and seeks to identify risk factors for its occurrence, separately in the intensive and conventional treatment groups.DESIGN AND METHODSELIGIBILITYDesign and methods have been presented in detailand summarizedpreviously. Briefly, major eligibility criteria were age of 13 to 39 years, insulin dependence as evidenced by deficient C-peptide secretion, general good health without hypertension or hypercholesterolemia, and willingness, after a detailed informed consent process, to accept random assignment to intensive or conventional treatment. The trial followed the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the institutional review boards for research in human subjects of the participating centers.Two groups of participants were enrolled: (1) a primary prevention cohort of 726 patients with diabetes of 1 to 5 years' duration, no retinopathy observed on color photographs, best-corrected visual acuity in each eye of 20/25 or better with the use of Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) charts, and urinary albumin excretion rate (AER) less than 40 mg/24 h; and (2) a secondary intervention cohort of 715 patients with diabetes of 1 to 15 years' duration, very mild (microaneurysms only) to moderate nonproliferative retinopathy, visual acuity in each eye of 20/32 or better, and urinary AER less than 200 mg/24 h.TREATMENTParticipants were randomly assigned to receive either conventional or intensive treatment. Conventional treatment consisted of 1 or 2 daily insulin injections, daily self-monitoring of urine or blood glucose levels, and diet and exercise education. The goals of treatment were freedom from symptoms of hyperglycemia and from severe or frequent hypoglycemia, as well as maintenance of normal growth and development and ideal body weight. Intensive treatment consisted of insulin administered 3 or more times daily by injection or an external pump, with doses adjusted according to self-monitored blood glucose levels measured at least 4 times per day and to anticipated diet intake and exercise. The goals were preprandial blood glucose levels of 3.8 to 6.7 mmol/L (70-120 mg/dL) and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level within the nondiabetic range (<6.05%).ASSESSMENT OF RETINOPATHYSeven-field stereoscopic color fundus photographs were taken by certified photographers every 6 months and were graded centrally (with graders masked to treatment) according to the ETDRS modification of the Airlie House classification. This classification provides a grade for the severity of each type of lesion of diabetic retinopathy for each eye. Grades for the various lesions were used to derive overall retinopathy severity levels for each patient according to the ETDRS final scale.Fundus photographs were also obtained at 3 months for the initial 389 patients enrolled in the trial, after which this assessment was dropped from the protocol.DEFINITIONS OF EWIn reports from other studies, worsening has been expressed variably as an increase of a specified amount along a severity scale,as the development of specific lesions such as soft exudates (SE; cotton-wool spots) and/or intraretinal microvascular abnormalities (IRMA; ie, dilated tortuous intraretinal vessels),and as clinically important progression with or without visual impairment.The time after initiation of intensive treatment at which worsening has been considered "early" has varied from 3 to 12 months.We used 4 definitions of EW: (1) progression of 3 steps or more on the ETDRS final scale (3-step or more EW); (2) development of SE and/or IRMA in participants free of both lesions at baseline (SE/IRMA EW); (3) development of clinically important retinopathy, defined as severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (SNPDR), proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR), or clinically significant macular edema (CSME), as defined in the ETDRS(clinically important EW); or (4) any EW, which was defined as present when any of the 3 other definitions of EW were present at a visit for a given patient. For each definition, EW was considered present if it was observed at the 6- and/or 12-month visit after randomization. The first 3 definitions are not mutually exclusive. The analysis of any 1 definition of EW included each patient who met the criteria for that definition, regardless of whether that patient also did or did not meet the criteria for other definitions of EW.To evaluate the longer-term clinical impact of EW, we analyzed rates of subsequent progression from the level of retinopathy present at the 18-month visit, using the criterion of progression by 3 or more steps on the ETDRS final scale sustained for 2 consecutive 6-month visits (sustained 3-step progression). The subsequent event was counted at the time of the first of the 2 consecutive "positive" visits. We also compared change in retinopathy severity between the baseline and 4-year visits in those with vs those without EW.STATISTICAL METHODSSimple proportions were computed to describe the prevalence of the 4 types of EW within the intensive and conventional treatment groups, stratified by the baseline retinopathy severity level, and then for all the baseline levels combined. Within each baseline retinopathy stratum, a logistic regression modelwas used to compute the maximum likelihood estimate of the log odds of EW in the intensive treatment group relative to the conventional treatment group. Analyses were adjusted for baseline retinopathy level stratified according to whether there was no baseline retinopathy (10/10 on the ETDRS scale), microaneurysms only (20/<20 or 20/20), or more severe retinopathy present (30/<30 or worse).The Wald χ2was used to assess the significance of individual regression coefficients, while the likelihood ratio χ2was used to assess the significance of the set of covariates simultaneously. The proportion of explained variation associated with a specific covariate is measured by the entropy (R2), computed as the ratio of the likelihood ratio or Wald χ2to the −2 log likelihood of the model with no covariates.Analyses were also conducted comparing EW vs no EW and intensive vs conventional treatment within different subgroups based on selected baseline covariates. The homogeneity of odds ratios (ORs) for intensive vs conventional treatment among strata was tested by means of a treatment×covariate interaction in the logistic model.These regression models were used to describe the expected probability of EW as a function of the reduction in HbA1cduring the first 6 months of intensive therapy. The actual models included regression coefficients for the intercept (β0) and 13 covariates (β1, . . . , β13). For an individual patient with covariate values (X1, . . . , X13), the estimated probability of EW is provided by P=(1+e−η)−1where η=(β0+X1β1+. . .+X13β13). In these models, X13is the value of the reduction in HbA1cfrom screening to the average at months 4 and 5. To describe the average risk of EW as a function of the reduction in HbA1c, these estimated probabilities were obtained for a hypothetical patient with the average value of the other covariates.For those with EW vs those without EW, the (crude) rate of progression by 3 or more steps relative to the retinopathy level at 18 months, expressed as a rate per 100 patient-years,was computed separately for each of the 3 baseline retinopathy strata (10, 20s, or ≥30), and then for all the strata combined. The relative risk of 3-step or more progression for those with EW relative to those without EW was computed by means of the proportional hazards regression model,and the log relative risk (log hazard ratio) was estimated via the regression coefficients. These proportional hazards analyses were performed separately within baseline retinopathy strata, and then for all strata combined, both with and without stratifying for the levels of retinopathy at month 18.The proportional hazards regression model was also used to compute the risk of 3-step or more progression in the intensive treatment group relative to the conventional treatment group, among those with EW and among those without EW, again separately within baseline retinopathy strata, and then for all the strata combined. Tests of significance were based on the likelihood ratio χ2. Additional analyses comparing the relative risks of intensive vs conventional treatment among those with vs those without EW were performed by testing for significant differences between the log of the relative risks by means of a standard ztest.The distribution of the number of steps of change in the level of retinopathy from that at baseline to that at year 4 was compared between those with EW and those without EW by means of the Mann-Whitney test,separately for each of the 2 treatment groups. These analyses were performed with and without stratification adjustment for the baseline levels of retinopathy. In the stratified analysis, the overall test of differences between those with and those without EW was obtained with the Wei-Lachin test of stochastic orderingamong the Mann-Whitney analyses within strata, using equal weights for each of the retinopathy strata. The data are summarized by presenting the proportion of patients whose retinopathy level at year 4 relative to the baseline level was better, the same, worse by 1 or 2 steps, or worse by 3 or more steps, separately among those with EW and among those without EW.The differences between the intensive vs conventional treatment groups were also examined, separately among those with EW and among those without EW, by means of the Mann-Whitney test, with and without stratification for baseline retinopathy levels. The Wei-Lachin testwas also used to test treatment group differences combined over strata and across those with and those without EW. Additionally, the Mann-Whitney difference between the groups was compared between those with EW and those without EW by means of a standard ztest.RESULTSBASELINE CHARACTERISTICSSelected baseline characteristics stratified by baseline retinopathy severity level are shown in Table 1. In retinopathy severity level 10/10 (the primary intervention cohort), the shorter duration of diabetes and the lower AER reflected the lower maximum values required for eligibility in this cohort. Within the secondary intervention cohort (levels 20/<20 and higher), duration of diabetes, AER, and prevalence of clinical neuropathy increased with increasing retinopathy severity, as expected.Table 1. Baseline Characteristics by Baseline Retinopathy Severity Level*See table graphicINCIDENCE OF AND RECOVERY FROM EWThe proportions of patients who experienced EW according to each definition at 6 and/or 12 months are presented in Table 2together with the ORs for the intensive vs conventional treatment groups. More patients in the intensive treatment group experienced EW than in the conventional treatment group, particularly at the 6-month visit. The occurrence of 3-step or more EW at the 6-month visit was almost 3 times greater in the intensive than the conventional treatment group: 3.5% (25/711) vs 1.2% (9/728), OR=2.98, P=.006. In the intensive group, 19 of these 25 cases had recovered to less than 3 steps worse at the next visit at month 12, while 6 of these 25 cases persisted. At the 12-month visit, 17 new cases were added, for a total of 23 (3.2%) in the intensive treatment group. In the conventional treatment group at 12 months, 5 of the 9 cases from 6 months had recovered, while 14 new cases were observed, for a total of 18 (2.5%). The total risk of 3-step or more EW at 6 and/or 12 months was 1.91 times greater in the intensive treatment group (P=.02), owing largely to the excess of cases observed at 6 months. Total recovery at the 18-month visit was 69% in the intensive vs 57% in the conventional treatment group (OR=1.56, P=.51). These rates were similiar to those observed at the subsequent visit when 3-step or more worsening from baseline occurred at any visit during follow-up, which were 72% and 51%, respectively; recovery at any future visit was 2.5 times as frequent with intensive as compared with conventional treatment (P<.01).Similar patterns of greater risk in the intensive group were observed with SE/IRMA EW, OR=2.41 (P<.001); clinically important EW, OR=1.57, P=.30; and with any EW, OR=2.06 (P<.001), while rates of recovery were similiar in both treatment groups.Table 2. Patients With Early Worsening at 6 and 12 Months and Recovery at Next VisitSee table graphicA similar analysis of any EW at the 3-month visit was conducted (data not shown) for the 389 patients who had 3-month photographs. The occurrence of any EW at the 3-month visit was 3.7 times greater in the intensive than the conventional treatment group: 10.7% (21/197) vs 3.6% (7/192), OR=3.7 (P=.005). The corresponding OR for any EW at 3 and/or 6 months was also 3.7 (P=.001). Approximately 50% of patients with any EW at 3 months had recovered at 6 months, and more than 60% of those with any EW at 3 or 6 months had recovered at 12 months.IMPACT OF CLINICALLY IMPORTANT EWAmong the 25 cases of clinically important EW at 6 or 12 months, there were 3 eyes of 2 patients with high-risk PDR. Both patients had moderate NPDR at baseline and were in the intensive treatment group. All 3 eyes were treated with scatter photocoagulation and the new vessels regressed. The patient with high-risk PDR in both eyes, first observed at 3 months, also had CSME accompanied by a decrease in visual acuity to 20/40 in each eye, with partial recovery (to 20/25 in each eye) after focal/grid photocoagulation. In 3 additional patients (2 in the intensive and 1 in the conventional treatment group), CSME accompanied by decreases in visual acuity of 1 to 4 lines developed in 4 eyes (3 with mild and 1 with moderate NPDR at baseline), with recovery to 20/20 or better in 3 eyes and to 20/30 in the fourth (after focal/grid photocoagulation in 2 eyes and spontaneously in 2 eyes).EW WITHIN RETINOPATHY SEVERITY SUBGROUPSTable 3presents the incidence and ORs of EW occurring at 6 or 12 months within subgroups of severity of retinopathy at baseline. Early worsening was most frequent when defined as development of SE/IRMA, and the frequency of this type of EW increased about 40-fold with increasing severity of baseline retinopathy. This steep increase was to be expected because development of SE/IRMA represents more substantial progression for eyes with no retinopathy than is the case for eyes that already have mild retinopathy. The percentage of patients with 3-step or more EW was substantially less than the percentage with SE/IRMA EW, and the occurrence of 3-step or more EW did not increase as markedly as a function of baseline retinopathy severity, at least in part because 3-step or more EW required a similar degree of worsening for all baseline severity levels.Table 3. Patients With Each Type of Early Worsening at 6 and/or 12 Months*See table graphicClinically important EW occurred almost exclusively in the 2 most severe baseline retinopathy categories, where its frequency was similar to that of 3-step or more EW. Of the 25 cases of clinically important EW occurring at 6 or 12 months, 16 also met the 3-step or more definition (14 with severe NPDR or PDR and 2 with CSME) and 9 had CSME without 3-step or more progression. Of the 25 cases, 9 were free of SE/IRMA at baseline, and 8 of these developed SE/IRMA EW.The ORs for intensive vs conventional treatment varied somewhat among the baseline severity categories, but the differences between categories were not significantly different (tests of homogeneity yielded Pvalues ranging from .50 to .83). Adjusting for the baseline level of retinopathy, ORs were 1.9 for 3-step or more EW, 2.4 for SE/IRMA EW, and 1.6 for clinically important EW.INCIDENCE OF EW WITHIN OTHER SUBGROUPSTable 4presents the incidence of any EW with intensive vs conventional treatment within patient subgroups defined by baseline factors. In no instance was the OR for intensive vs conventional treatment significantly different between baseline subgroups (interaction P≥.10). Among the like analyses for each definition of EW, only the difference between the ORs for SE/IRMA EW was nominally significant between men and women (1.6 in men vs 4.7 in women, P=.03, compared with 2.4 overall), excluding 23 women who were pregnant at 6 or 12 months (data not shown).Table 4. Prevalence of Any Early Worsening and Odds Ratios for Intensive vs Conventional Treatment Within Subgroups Defined by Baseline Factors*See table graphicTable 4also indicates that the risk of any EW increased significantly with increasing levels of screening HbA1cand duration of diabetes within both treatment groups, and with increasing levels of AER in the intensive treatment group.PROGNOSTIC SIGNIFICANCE OF EW FOR SUBSEQUENT RETINOPATHY PROGRESSIONFigure 1presents the cumulative incidence of sustained 3-step or more progression (ie, present at 2 or more consecutive 6-month visits) from the level present at the 18-month visit within each treatment group for patients who had and those who had not experienced 3-step or more EW. In the conventional treatment group, after an additional 5 years of follow-up, approximately 58% of those with 3-step or more EW would have subsequently experienced a further sustained progression of retinopathy, compared with 26% among those without such EW (Figure 1, left). In the intensive treatment group (Figure 1, right), approximately 20% of those with 3-step or more EW would have had subsequent progression, compared with 5% among those without such EW.Figure 1.Cumulative incidence of sustained 3-step or more progression from the level of retinopathy present at 18 months for those with and those without 3-step or more early worsening. Left, Conventional treatment group. Right, Intensive treatment group.Table 5presents rates of sustained 3-step or more progression of retinopathy from the level present at the 18-month visit for patients who had and those who had not experienced EW according to each definition. In addition to the crude rates, the adjusted relative risk of subsequent progression was computed comparing those with and those without previous EW, with adjustment for the actual level of retinopathy present at 18 months. For 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW, in both treatment groups, progression rates were higher in participants who had experienced EW. Overall, the risk of subsequent progression was 1.9 to 4.1 times greater among those with 3-step or more EW or SE/IRMA EW; these relative risks were not significantly different between the treatment groups (data not shown).Table 5. Sustained 3-Step or More Progression From the Level of Retinopathy Observed at 18 Months With RR for Those With and Without Early Worsening Within Each Treatment Group, and With RR for Intensive vs Conventional Treatment Within Each Category of Early Worsening*See table graphicFor clinically important EW (Table 5), in the conventional treatment group, there was a similar 2-fold increase in risk of subsequent progression in participants with vs those without such EW, although this was not significant after adjusting for the level of retinopathy at 18 months. Within the intensive treatment group, there was no increased risk of subsequent progression among those with clinically important EW.Comparison of rates of subsequent progression between the intensive and the conventional treatment groups (Table 5) shows the striking beneficial effect of intensive treatment, even in patients who experienced EW. Among those with 3-step or more EW (Table 5), the overall risks of subsequent progression with intensive and conventional treatment were 4.49 and 15.29 per 100 patient-years, respectively. The corresponding relative risk (intensive-conventional) is 0.35 (P=.03), which represents a 65% reduction in risk. Among those without 3-step or more EW, there was an 84% risk reduction with intensive treatment (1.04 vs 5.95 per 100 patient-years; P<.001). These risk reductions with intensive vs conventional treatment (65% vs 84%) are not significantly different (P=.12), which indicates that the relative benefit of intensive vs conventional treatment was not significantly different between those with and those without EW.In fact, the risk of subsequent progression was significantly less among intensively treated patients withEW than among conventionally treated patients withoutEW for SE/IRMA EW (P=.03 for 1.78 vs 5.22 per 100 patient-years), clinically important EW (P=.03 for 1.39 vs 7.11 per 100 patient-years), and any EW (P<.001 for 2.33 vs 5.75 per 100 patient-years), but not for 3-step or more EW.RETINOPATHY STATUS AT 4 YEARSAn alternate approach, which takes into consideration both the change occurring between baseline and 18 months and that occurring subsequently, is to consider the change between baseline and a fixed, long-term follow-up visit. For this purpose, we chose the change from baseline to 4 years, when the greatest number of subjects had long-term follow-up. Table 6presents a summary of the distributions of the degree of change in retinopathy severity between the baseline and 4-year visits for participants with and without EW, according to each of the definitions. For participants with 3-step or more EW, mean change was about 4 steps worse in the conventional treatment group and about 2 steps worse in the intensive treatment group, compared with 1.1 and 0.6 steps worse, respectively, in these treatment groups among those without 3-step or more EW.Table 6. Change in Retinopathy Level Between Baseline and 4-Year Visit for Patients With and Without Early Worsening by Treatment Group*See table graphicAnalysis of the mean number of steps worse reflects the distance along the scale under the assumption of equal intervals of retinopathy severity between steps, but because the intervals cannot be assumed to be equal, statistical tests were not performed on the differences between these means. Instead, differences are presented between the EW and no EW groups in the estimated probability that participants in the specified group would have a less favorable outcome (more steps of worsening or fewer steps of improvement) compared with participants in the other group (the Mann-Whitney difference, EW−no EW). The Mann-Whitney difference is an appropriate statistic for use with the ordinal retinopathy severity scale because the actual number of steps of difference along the scale is not considered, only their relative ordering. If the distributions among those with and without EW were identical (the null hypothesis), then the Mann-Whitney difference on average would be 0.For 3-step or more EW, the Mann-Whitney difference (stratified-adjusted for baseline retinopathy category) was 0.63 in the conventional treatment group and 0.54 in the intensive treatment group, indicating substantially greater probability of retinopathy progression between baseline and 4 years in patients with EW in both treatment groups. The difference between the 2 treatment groups was not significant (P=.38).Likewise, there was more progression in participants with than in those without SE/IRMA EW. The increase in the degree of progression among those with vs without SE/IRMA EW was smaller in the intensive than in the conventional treatment group (P=.04 for 0.63 vs 0.45).Most clinically important EW occurred in the most severe baseline retinopathy category (Table 3) and was associated with a less favorable outcome at the 4-year visit only in the conventional treatment group (Table 6) (overall, P<.001 for Mann-Whitney difference of 0.79 in the conventional group vs 0.14 in the intensive group). Among those with such clinically important EW in the intensive group, 62% (8/13) recovered at 4 years to a level the same as or better than that at baseline, vs 18% (2/11) of those in the conventional group.As with 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW, in both treatment groups, those with any EW had a less favorable retinopathy status at 4 years than those without any EW; the difference between treatment groups was not significant (P=.38 for 0.49 vs 0.34).BASELINE PREDICTORS OF EARLY WORSENINGTable 7presents logistic regression models for the risk (OR) of any EW as a function of a set of baseline characteristics (selected a priori) separately for the intensive and conventional treatment groups. Since the results were similar for each type of EW, only the models for any EW are presented. Within each treatment group, the screening (before randomization) level of HbA1cwas among the most important predictors of EW, as reflected by the relative magnitude of the R2value for each covariate. The increased risk associated with more severe retinopathy at baseline was contributed mostly by cases of SE/IRMA EW (as expected from Table 3). The risk of EW also tended to increase with increasing duration of diabetes (in both cohorts and both treatment groups) and to decrease in women in the conventional treatment group.Table 7. Logistic Regression Analysis of Odds of Any Early Worsening as a Function of Baseline Covariates Only*See table graphicREDUCTION IN HbA1cLEVEL AND RISK OF EWFigure 2shows the distribution of the change in HbA1clevel from the screening visit to the 6-month visit in each treatment group. In the conventional treatment group, the level of HbA1cremained relatively unchanged; more than 60% were within 0.2 of their initial level and less than 10% had a reduction of 2 or more HbA1cpercent.In the intensive treatment group, the levels of HbA1cfell rapidly during the first 3 months of treatment.Figure 2.Spline-smoothed estimates of the distribution of the reduction in hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) level at 6 months from the level of HbA1cat screening in the conventional and the intensive treatment groups (negative values represent increases in HbA1clevel). The density estimate is the estimated integrand such that the total area under each curve is 1.0. Note that nearly one half of intensively treated patients had a reduction of 2 U or more, while few conventionally treated patients did so.At the 6-month visit, the median reduction in HbA1clevel from the value at screening was 1.8, with lower and upper quartiles of 1.0 and 3.0 HbA1cpercent. The change in HbA1clevel from screening to 6 months, however, was highly associated with the initial screening value; those entering the trial with the highest screening HbA1cvalues experienced the greatest reduction in HbA1cwith intensive therapy.Crude rates of any EW are depicted in Figure 3as a function of the tertiles of screening HbA1cvalues, and within these, in tertiles of the month 6 reduction in HbA1c, separately for the intensive and conventional treatment groups. As the figure is scanned from front to back, examining increasing reductions in HbA1camong subgroups with similar screening HbA1clevels, rather steep increases in the incidence of EW are seen. Scanning across the figure from right to left, examining increasing levels of HbA1cat screening among subgroups with similar reductions, there are less steep and less consistent increases in the incidence of EW. Even though the reductions in HbA1cwere not as great among conventionally treated patients, the crude risks of EW in this treatment group appeared comparable with those in intensively treated patients who had equivalent reductions in HbA1c.Figure 3.Proportion of patients in the intensive and conventional treatment groups experiencing any early worsening within tertiles (thirds) of the distribution of the screening hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) value and, for each, within tertiles of the distribution of the month 6 reduction in HbA1clevel from the initial screening value.The relationships of EW to screening HbA1cand reduction of HbA1cduring the first 6 months of treatment were further explored by means of logistic regression models. Since the screening HbA1cis included in these models, the estimated OR, Pvalue, and R2values will be identical for the effect of an individual follow-up HbA1cvalue (eg, at month 3) and that of the change from the screening HbA1c(eg, from screening to month 3). Models in the conventional treatment group showed that the reduction in HbA1cat the 3- and 6-month visits, either individually or in aggregate, did not add significantly (P>.88) to the contribution of the screening HbA1cand other baseline covariates to the risk of either 3-step or more EW or SE/IRMA EW.Initial models in the intensive group examined the effects of the HbA1cvalues at each month (months 1-6), when adjusted for the other baseline covariates. In combination, the first 6 monthly HbA1clevels added significantly to the model for the risk of 3-step or more EW (P=.05) and to the model for SE/IRMA EW (P=.006), but not to the model for clinically important EW (P=.33). The effects of these HbA1cmeasures were also examined individually and in various combinations, including the slope of the decrease during the first 3 months and during the entire 6 months. Of these, the month 4 and month 5 HbA1cvalues accounted for most of the association with the risk of 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW. Therefore, subsequent analyses used the mean of the month 4 and 5 values for each subject, designated as the month 4-5 value. We then explored the relative contributions of the screening HbA1cvalue, the month 4-5 value, and the change in HbA1cfrom screening to month 4-5. Of these, the change from screening to month 4-5 was most important.Models that include the screening HbA1cand change from screening to month 4-5, in addition to the other baseline covariates, are presented in Table 8for the risks of 3-step or more EW, SE/IRMA EW, and any EW in the intensive treatment group. Comparison of the any EW panel with the intensive treatment group model in Table 7shows results that are almost identical, except that the reduction in HbA1chas replaced the screening HbA1cvalue as an important risk factor. The effect of screening HbA1cis not significant because this effect is in part absorbed into the effect of the change at months 4-5, which depends on the screening value itself. For those with a screening HbA1clevel of 7%, the range of HbA1creductions at month 4-5 spanned only 0% to 2%, while the range for those with a screening HbA1cof 10% spanned 0% to 4.6% (2% and 4.6% being the 95th percentiles of the respective distributions of reduction of HbA1c).Table 8. Logistic Regression Analysis of Odds of Early Worsening as a Function of Baseline Covariates and Change in HbA1c: Intensive Treatment*See table graphicIn these models, for each unit decrease in mean HbA1cpercentage at month 4-5 from the value at screening, there was a 1.6-fold increase in the risk of any EW, a 1.5-fold increase in the risk of 3-step or more EW, and a 1.7-fold increase in the risk of SE/IRMA EW. This risk gradient for 3-step or more EW is depicted in Figure 4, left, separately for the primary and secondary cohorts. The corresponding risk gradients for SE/IRMA EW are presented in Figure 4, right. Each figure is based on the means of the covariate values. For a patient with different values of the other covariates, the risks (odds) of EW would be proportional to those presented in the figures.Figure 4.Probability of early worsening defined as 3-step or more progression (left) and soft exudates/intraretinal microvascular abnormalities (right) in the intensive treatment group for the primary (dashed line) and the secondary (solid line) cohorts as a function of the month 4 to 5 average reduction in hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) level from the level at screening estimated from the logistic regression models (adjusted for the mean values of other covariates) in Table 8. The respective regression coefficients corresponding to the average reduction in HbA1clevel were 0.38 (left) and 0.53 (right). The intercepts in the left panel were −4.49 (primary cohort) and −3.61 (secondary cohort). The intercepts in the right panel were −6.62 (primary cohort) and −2.99 (secondary cohort). These intercepts include all other covariate effects evaluated at their mean values.Although the goal for all patients assigned to intensive treatment was the rapid achievement of normoglycemia, there was considerable variability in the time course of the reduction in HbA1coccurring between the initial screening, baseline evaluation, and 6-month visits in both intensively and conventionally treated patients. Therefore, post hoc, we compared the incidence of EW in groups of patients whose HbA1clevel decreased at different rates. We calculated reductions in each of 3 time intervals (screening to baseline, baseline to month 3, and month 3 to month 6), summed these reductions (ignoring any increases), and cross-classified patients by the total reduction in HbA1cand by the time course of the reduction. For convenience, and to provide adequate numbers in each cell, total reduction was divided into intervals that approximated 2 to 3, 3 to 4, and 4 or more HbA1cpercent (1.75%-2.74%, 2.75%-3.74%, and ≥3.75%; patients with <1.75% reduction were excluded from this analysis). Time course was defined by the percentage of the total reduction in HbA1cthat occurred in any single interval (shorter time course, ≥80.00%; intermediate time course, 60.00%-79.99%; longer time course, <60.00%). With these definitions, 80% of the 258 patients in the shorter interval category had 80% or more of their total reduction in the baseline to month 3 interval, while 22% of the 170 patients in the longer interval category had their total reductions spread fairly evenly across all 3 intervals (ie, had ≥20% of the total in each interval) and nearly all of the remainder had 80% or more of the reduction spread across 2 adjacent intervals (screening to 3 months in 42% and baseline to 6 months in 44%). Table 9presents the proportions of patients (intensive and conventional treatment groups combined) in each of the resulting 9 subgroups who developed any EW. There was no consistent relationship between the rapidity of HbA1cdecrease and the frequency of EW.Table 9. Number and Percentage of Patients With Any EW by Magnitude and Time Course of Reduction in HbA1c*See table graphicCOMMENTPROGNOSTIC IMPORTANCE OF EWThe risk of further sustained 3-step or more progression from the retinopathy level present at 18 months was 2 to 4 times greater in patients who had had 3-step or more EW or SE/IRMA EW vs those who had not (Table 5). However, the large risk reduction of intensive vs conventional treatment observed overallwas present to a similar degree among those who developed EW and those who did not. For SE/IRMA EW, clinically important EW, and any EW, the long-term risk of progression in intensively treated patients who developed EW was actually less than that in conventionally treated patients who did not. An analysis of change in retinopathy between the baseline and 4-year visits also showed more progression in patients with EW than in those without it when comparisons were made within treatment groups, as well as less progression in the intensive vs the conventional treatment groups when comparisons were made among those with and those without EW (Table 6). However, in this analysis, outcome in intensively treated patients who developed EW tended to be similiar to that in conventionally treated patients who did not. Thus, the phenomenon of EW indicates a poorer retinopathic prognosis, yet one that can still be greatly mitigated by long-term intensive treatment.RISK FACTORS FOR EWThe most consistent baseline risk factor for EW was the screening level of HbA1cobtained at the initial contact with each patient (OR for any EW of 1.6 for each unit increase in HbA1cpercent at screening in the intensive treatment group and 1.3 in the conventional treatment group; Table 7).The decrease in HbA1cduring the first 6 months of intensive treatment was also a risk factor for 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW. It was difficult to separate this effect from that of the screening level of HbA1c, because the decrease was greatest in patients who entered with the highest levels at screening. Thus, a higher initial value of the screening HbA1cwas associated with a greater reduction in HbA1c, which in turn was associated with increased risk of EW (Figure 3). In the conventional treatment group, few patients experienced a substantial decrease in HbA1c(Figure 2), and in this group the levels of HbA1cduring the first 6 months of the trial did not add significantly to the screening HbA1cand other risk factors in predicting EW (data not shown). In the intensive treatment group, regression analyses incorporating both screening HbA1cand change between the screening and month 4-5 values showed the latter to be the dominant risk factor for 3-step or more EW and SE/IRMA EW (Table 8). Overall, after adjusting for the screening level of HbA1cand other factors, for every unit reduction in HbA1cpercent at month 4-5 with intensive therapy, there was a 47% increase in the odds of 3-step or more EW and a 69% increase in the odds of SE/IRMA EW.Others have also found the level of hyperglycemia at baseline and the magnitude of its reduction after improved control to be the predominant risk factors for EW,and the suggestion has frequently been made that the risk might be decreased by improving control more slowly. We could not address this question directly (to do so would require a randomized study), but we were able to compare the incidence of EW in those patients who experienced nearly all of the reduction in the first 3 months after baseline with those in whom the reduction was spread across an interval of 6 to 9 months, simultaneously controlling for the total amount of reduction in HbA1c. In this analysis, we found no evidence to support the suggestion that HbA1creduction across a longer interval was associated with less risk of EW than a reduction during a shorter interval, when the reductions were of comparable magnitude. Moreover, in the regression models, the slope of the decrease in HbA1cduring the first 3 or 6 months of treatment was a less powerful predictor of EW than was the month 4-5 level.CLINICALLY IMPORTANT EWThe cases we have classified as clinically important EW were similar to those observed in other clinical trials that included patients with moderate NPDR in that progression, though clinically important, was not catastrophic.High-risk PDR developed in only 3 eyes, all of which responded well to scatter photocoagulation. In 6 eyes CSME led to small decreases in visual acuity, with recovery to 20/20 or better in 3 eyes, to 20/25 in 2, and to 20/30 in 1. Others have reported case series in which there was more serious progression, sometimes leading to substantial loss of vision.The cases in each of these reports differed from those in the DCCT and similar trials in that retinopathy was more severe and/or blood glucose control was poorer at baseline (and thus the decrease after initiation of intensive insulin treatment was greater).PATHOGENESIS OF EWAlthough our analyses provide strong documentation of the importance of the magnitude of the decrease in HbA1cas a risk factor for EW (Figure 4and Table 8), they do not advance the debate regarding the specific pathogenesis of EW. Early worsening tended to occur earlier (Table 2) and recovery from it to be more frequent (Tables 2 and 5) in intensively treated than in conventionally treated patients, but we found no other distinguishing features. Possible mechanisms of EW suggested by others have included decrease in nutrient substrate, decreased ability of the retinal circulation to autoregulate, and increase in growth factors.CONCLUSIONSIn our analyses the magnitude, but not the rapidity, of the reduction in HbA1cduring the first 6 months of intensive treatment was an important risk factor for EW. Intensive treatment led to an approximately 2-fold increase in the risk of EW (Table 3), which in turn increased the risk of subsequent retinopathy progression 2- to 4-fold (Table 5). However, the remarkable ultimate beneficial effect of long-term intensive treatment outweighed these risks, so that retinopathy progression between the baseline and 4-year visits was no greater even in intensively treated patients who experienced EW than in conventionally treated patients who did not, and the risk of progression from the retinopathy level present at the 18-month visit tended to be less in the former group than in the latter. Thus, as previously recommended,intensive treatment should be implemented in all appropriate patients, with the expectation that the long-term risks of retinopathy progression, and the risks of the other microvascular complications of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, will be substantially reduced.However, whereas no case of EW was associated with serious visual loss in the DCCT, our results are consistent with previous reports of the occurrence of sight-threatening worsening when intensive treatment is initiated in patients with long-standing poor glycemic control, particularly if retinopathy is at or past the moderate nonproliferative stage.Ophthalmologic monitoring before initiation of intensive treatment and at 3-month intervals for 6 to 12 months thereafter would seem to be appropriate for such patients. 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New York, NY: Chapman & Hall; 1989:98-123.ELKornRSimonExplained residual variation, explained risk, and goodness of fit.Am Statistician.1991;45:201-206.NEBreslowNEDayStatistical Methods in Cancer Research, Volume II: The Design and Analysis of Cohort Studies.Lyon, France: International Agency for Research on Cancer; 1987:48-53.JDKalbfleischRLPrenticeThe Statistical Analysis of Failure Time Data.New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons Inc; 1980:70-118.JMLachinSome large sample distribution-free estimators and tests for multivariate partially incomplete observations from two populations.Stat Med.1992;11:1151-1170.DCCT Research GroupThe relationship of glycemic exposure (HbA1c) to the risk of development and progression of retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial.Diabetes.1995;44:968-983.DCCT Research GroupImplementation of treatment protocols in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial.Diabetes Care.1995;18:361-375.JTErnestTKGoldstickRLEngermanHyperglycemia impairs retinal oxygen autoregulation in normal and diabetic dogs.Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci.1983;24:985-989.EMKohnerMSleightholmTFallonWhy does retinopathy deteriorate when diabetic control is improved?Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci.1987;29(suppl):244.JEGrunwaldAJBruckerSSSchwartzDiabetic glycemic control and retinal blood flow.Diabetes.1990;39:602-607.JEGrunwaldCERivaBLPetrigStrict control of glycaemia: effects on blood flow in the large retinal vessels and in the macular microcirculation.Br J Ophthalmol.1995;79:735-741.Accepted for publication February 5, 1998.The DCCT is sponsored by the Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases of the National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md, through cooperative agreements and a research contract. Additional support was provided by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Eye Institute, and the General Clinical Research Center Program of the National Institute for Research Resources, Bethesda, Md.Reprints: The DCCT Research Group, Box NDIC/DCCT, Bethesda, MD 20892.

Journal

JAMA OphthalmologyAmerican Medical Association

Published: Jul 1, 1998

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