Effect of lisinopril on progression of retinopathy in normotensive people with type 1 diabetes
1998; Elsevier BV; Volume: 351; Issue: 9095 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/s0140-6736(97)06209-0
ISSN1474-547X
AutoresNish Chaturvedi, Anne-Katrin Sjolie, Judith Stephenson, Heidemarie Abrahamian, M Keipes, Allesandro Castellarin, Željka Rogulja-Pepeonik, John Fuller,
Tópico(s)Blood Pressure and Hypertension Studies
ResumoRetinopathy commonly occurs in people with type 1 diabetes. Strict glycaemic control can decrease development and progression of retinopathy only partially. Blood pressure is also a risk factor for microvascular complications. Antihypertensive therapy, especially with inhibitors of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), can slow progression of nephropathy, but the effects on retinopathy have not been established. We investigated the effect of lisinopril on retinopathy in type 1 diabetes.As part of a 2-year randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial, we took retinal photographs at baseline and follow-up (24 months) in patients aged 20-59 in 15 European centres. Patients were not hypertensive, and were normoalbuminuric (85%) or microalbuminuric. Retinopathy was classified from photographs on a five-level scale (none to proliferative).The proportion of patients with retinopathy at baseline was 65% (117) in the placebo group and 59% (103) in the lisinopril group (p = 0.2). Patients on lisinopril had significantly lower HbA1c at baseline than those on placebo (6.9% vs 7.3 p = 0.05). Retinopathy progressed by at least one level in 21 (13.2%) of 159 patients on lisinopril and 39 (23.4%) of 166 patients on placebo (odds ratio 0.50 [95% CI 0.28-0.89], p = 0.02). This 50% reduction was the same when adjusted for centre and glycaemic control (0.55 [0.30-1.03], p = 0.06). Lisinopril also decreased progression by two or more grades (0.27 [0.07-1.00], p = 0.05), and progression to proliferative retinopathy (0.18 [0.04-0.82], p = 0.03). Progression was not associated with albuminuric status at baseline. Treatment reduced retinopathy incidence (0.69 [0.30-1.59], p = 0.4).Lisinopril may decrease retinopathy progression in non-hypertensive patients who have type 1 diabetes with little or no nephropathy. These findings need to be confirmed before changes to clinical practice can be advocated.
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