Read more

January 23, 2025
1 min read
Save

20 years of DRCR trials offer ‘fundamental contributions to clinical care’

Key takeaways:

  • DRCR Retina Network trials have made numerous contributions to diabetic retinopathy and diabetic macular edema care over the past 20 years.
  • Data suggest anti-VEGF is the standard of care for DME.

KOLOA, Hawaii — Data from various retinal clinical trials suggest that there is a difference in efficacy in anti-VEGF therapies for patients with lower vision, according to a speaker here.

During a presentation at Retina 2025, John W. Kitchens, MD, shared highlights from DRCR Retina Network studies across the past 20 years.

John W. Kitchens, MD
Image: Eamon N. Dreisbach

“We cannot overstate some of these fundamental contributions to clinical care,” he said.

Combination therapy for diabetic macular edema with an intravitreal dexamethasone implant and an anti-VEGF such as ranibizumab offers an enhanced drying effect on the retina, Kitchens explained.

“The way I treat in my clinic is I look at OCT, and I want to see the dryest possible OCT,” he said.

Research also indicates that topical antibiotics do not curb the risk for endophthalmitis, and anti-VEGF therapy is the standard of care for DME. Kitchens also noted that there is a large difference in cost among anti-VEGF therapies, and panretinal photocoagulation (PRP) in noninferior to anti-VEGF treatment for proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR).

Additionally, not all DME requires treatment.

“If you look at subclinical, non-center involved DME and follow those patients, not all of them progress to center involvement,” Kitchens said. “For patients with good visual acuity and center-involved DME, you don’t need to treat right away.”

Trials also indicate that pattern scan PRP may not be as effective as single-spot PRP for limiting progression of PDR.

“Protocol W, which treated patients with nonproliferative retinopathy with anti-VEGF therapy, showed that the treatment could reduce the chances of developing proliferative disease in DME,” he said. “The conclusion was: ‘We have treatment for these things. If they occur and PDR or DME develops, anti-VEGF and anti-VEGF with PRP laser treatment are effective, so why not wait and watch those patients then treat them when it occurs?’”