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Peter Scanlon, Consultant Ophthalmologist, Gloucestershire and Oxford Eye Units; Senior Research Fellow, Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford; Visiting Professor of Medical Ophthalmology, University of Gloucestershire, UK
Ahmed Sallam, MD, PhD, FRCOphth, Jones Eye Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, USA
Peter van Wijngaarden, Centre for Eye Research Australia, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Australia; Ophthalmology, Department of Surgery, University of Melbourne, Australia
Peter H. Scanlon
There is currently an epidemic of diabetes in the world, principally type 2 diabetes, that is linked to changing lifestyle, obesity and increasing age of the population. The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) publishes the Diabetes Atlas1 and has forecast a rise from the current level of 387 million people worldwide in 2014 to 592 million by 2035. The current level in 2014 is equivalent to 1 in 12 people in the world having diabetes, and 48.3% of these people are believed to be undiagnosed.
In 2000, Karvonen et al.2 reported a global variation in the incidence in different populations; the overall age-adjusted incidence of type 1 diabetes varied from 0.1/100,000 per year in China and Venezuela to 36.8/100,000 per year in Sardinia and 36.5/100,000 per year in Finland. The 2014 estimates1 for the prevalence of type 1 diabetes are 500,000 children aged under 15 years with type 1 diabetes worldwide, the largest numbers3 being in Europe (129,000) and North America (108,700), with the numbers have increased in most of the IDF regions.
The International Diabetes Federation has estimated1 the prevalence of diabetes in 2014 in 20-79 age groups and projected this to an estimate in 2035 (Fig. 1).
Fig 1 World map showing rising incidence and prevalence of diabetes.
Table 1
Individual publications4-10 from each region have described how these figures were arrived at. The report from the Western Pacific region was noteworthy because this region is home to one-quarter of the world's population, and includes China with the largest number of people with diabetes (98.41 million) as well as the Pacific Islands countries with the highest prevalence rates (Tokelau 37.49%, Federated States of Micronesia 35.03%, Marshall Islands 34.89%).
It is difficult to compare the many studies that have recorded the incidence and prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) or sight-threatening or vision-threatening diabetic retinopathy (STDR or VTDR) because of the difference in examination techniques and the different definitions, particularly of STDR and VTDR (see Fig. 2).
Fig. 2 World map showing high prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (DR) and proliferative DR.
Table 2
The map in Fig. 2 uses data from the following studies.
Of note, three studies21-23 have demonstrated that, if one screens for type 2 diabetes in different populations, the prevalence of diabetic retinopathy in screen-positive patients (7.6%, 6.8% and 9%) is much lower than the prevalence in the known population of people with diabetes.
In 1997, Kernell et al.24 reported the youngest child in the literature (11.8 years) at that time with pre-proliferative DR from Sweden.
In 1999, Donaghue et al.25 described the youngest child reported in the literature to have background diabetic retinopathy at that time (1999): 7.9 years (duration 5.6 years, HbA1c 8.9%) from Australia.
In 2008 and 2009, Klein et al.26,27 reported on the 25-year cumulative progression and regression of diabetic retinopathy and cumulative incidence of macular oedema (MO) and clinically significant macular oedema (CSMO) in type 1 patients in the Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy. The 25-year cumulative rate of progression of DR was 83%, progression to proliferative DR was 42%, and improvement of DR was 18%; the 25-year cumulative incidence was 29% for ME and 17% for CSME.
In 2009, Wong et al.28 conducted a systematic review of rates of progression of diabetic retinopathy in people with both type 1 and type 2 diabetes during different time periods. The article concluded that,...
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