Association between Systemic Factors and Vitreous Fluid Cytokines in Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy

Author:

Sato Tomohito1,Okazawa Rina1,Nagura Koichi1ORCID,Someya Hideaki1,Nishio Yoshiaki1,Enoki Toshio2,Ito Masataka3,Takeuchi Masaru1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ophthalmology, National Defense Medical College, 3-2 Namiki, Tokorozawa 359-8513, Japan

2. Enoki Eye Clinic, Sayama 350-1316, Japan

3. Department of Developmental Anatomy and Regenerative Biology, National Defense Medical College, Tokorozawa 359-8513, Japan

Abstract

Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) is a vision-threatening complication of diabetes mellitus (DM). Systemic and intraocular factors are intricately related to PDR, and vitreous fluid (VF) cytokines are representative intraocular biomarkers. However, the associations between systemic factors and VF cytokines and their influence on PDR pathology are unclear. This study aimed to examine the correlation between systemic factors and VF cytokines and analyze their contributions to the pathology of PDR using multivariate analyses. We conducted a retrospective observational study on 26 PDR eyes of 25 patients with type 2 DM, and 30 eyes of 30 patients with idiopathic macular hole or epiretinal membrane as controls. Fifteen systemic and laboratory tests including blood pressure (BP) and body mass index (BMI), and 27 cytokines in VF were analyzed. BP and BMI correlated positively with VF levels of IL-6 and IP-10 in PDR patients, while no significant correlation was found between systemic factors and VF cytokines in controls. MCP-1 and VEGF-A in VF separately clustered with different systemic factors in controls, but these cytokines lost the property similarity with systemic factors and acquired property similarity with each other in PDR. Systemic factors contributed to only 10.4%, whereas VF cytokines contributed to 42.3% out of 52.7% variance of the whole PDR dataset. Our results suggest that intraocular factors play a major role in the pathology of PDR, whereas systemic factors may have limited effects, and that BP and BMI control in PDR could be useful interventions to improve intraocular immune condition.

Funder

a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research C from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

a Grant-in-Aid for Encouragement of Young doctors from National Defense Medical College

Research Grant from Daiwa Securities Health Foundation

Hisakichi Matsubayashi Memorial Fund Subsidy

a Grant-in-Aid for Advanced Medical Development from National Defense Medical College

Alcon Research Grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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