Semaglutide和非动脉性前缺血性视神经病变:回顾和解释报道的关联。

IF 3 3区 医学 Q1 OPHTHALMOLOGY
Abdullah Amini, Steffen Hamann, Michael Larsen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文综述了一项开创性的研究,研究了在神经眼科临床环境中暴露于胰高血糖素样肽1 (GLP-1)激动剂semaglutide与非动脉性前缺血性视神经病变(NAION)之间的关系,随后在未选择人群中进行的研究,一项临床试验和视盘和视网膜病理生理学研究的meta分析,可能有助于阐明semaglutide与糖尿病或肥胖患者的NAION之间的关系。在神经眼科患者的匹配队列研究中,使用非semaglutide药物治疗的患者有NAION发生率,比背景人群高几个数量级,可能是因为转诊模式导致研究人群中有NAION高风险患者。使用semaglutide, 2型糖尿病(T2D)和肥胖症的NAION发生率分别高出4.28倍和7.64倍,并且NAION的发病时间在治疗开始后14个月内,而非semaglutide的NAION在3年的随访中均匀分布。在四项卫生保健登记研究中,每项研究都涵盖了超过10万名患者,其中两项研究发现,使用西马鲁肽的NAION的相对发生率比不使用西马鲁肽的高2到3倍,一项研究发现,只有在2型糖尿病患者中,西马鲁肽与NAION相关,一项研究发现,两种替代方案之间的不平衡在统计学上不显著。各种GLP-1受体激动剂与安慰剂或活性比较剂的meta分析发现,NAION的发生率无显著差异。先前关于长期血糖降低与视网膜病变早期恶化和NAION相关的报道表明,西马鲁肽可能与其降糖效能成比例地促进这些事件的发生。NAION与小而拥挤的椎间盘、视盘水肿和乳头周围渗出的关联表明,semaglu肽相关的NAION可能是由于灌注改变导致静脉扩张,可能是相对低血糖期间静脉充血。鉴于流行病学研究的回顾性性质,因果关系无法推断,但谨慎使用西马鲁肽和其他强效降糖剂似乎是有必要的,特别是在视盘拥挤的患者中,这一特征可以通过使用光学相干断层扫描对视盘危险特征进行前瞻性眼科检查来识别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Semaglutide and non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy: Review and interpretation of reported association.

This review covers a seminal study of the relation between exposure to the glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonist semaglutide and incident non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (NAION) in a neuro-ophthalmology clinic setting, subsequent studies in unselected populations, a meta-analysis of clinical trials and pathophysiology studies of the optic disc and retina that may help elucidate the relation between semaglutide and NAION in patients with diabetes or obesity. In the matched cohort study of neuro-ophthalmology patients, those treated using agents other than semaglutide had NAION rates, orders of magnitude higher than a background population, presumably because referral patterns led to the enrichment of the study populations with patients at high risk of NAION. With semaglutide, the rates of NAION were 4.28 and 7.64 times higher for type 2 diabetes (T2D) and obesity, respectively, and onset of NAION was within 14 months of treatment initiation, whereas non-semaglutide NAION was evenly distributed over the 3 years of follow-up. Of four health care registry studies, each covering more than 100 000 patients, two found relative rates of NAION two to three times higher with semaglutide than without semaglutide, one found a trend towards semaglutide being associated with NAION in patients with type 2 diabetes only, and one found statistically insignificant imbalances between the two alternatives. The meta-analysis of various GLP-1 receptor agonists versus placebo or active comparator found no significant difference in rates of NAION. Prior reports of long-term glycaemia reduction being associated with early worsening of retinopathy and with NAION indicate that semaglutide may promote such events in proportion to its antihyperglycaemic potency. The association of NAION with small, crowded discs, optic disc oedema and peripapillary exudation suggests that semaglutide-related NAION may result from changes in perfusion that lead to venous dilation and, presumably, to venous congestion during relative hypoglycaemia. Given the retrospective nature of the epidemiological studies, causality cannot be inferred, but a cautious approach to the use of semaglutide and other powerful glycaemia-reducing agents seems warranted, particularly in patients with crowded optic discs, a characteristic that can be identified by proactive eye examination for disc-at-risk characteristics by the use of optical coherence tomography.

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来源期刊
Acta Ophthalmologica
Acta Ophthalmologica 医学-眼科学
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
5.90%
发文量
433
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Acta Ophthalmologica is published on behalf of the Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation and is the official scientific publication of the following societies: The Danish Ophthalmological Society, The Finnish Ophthalmological Society, The Icelandic Ophthalmological Society, The Norwegian Ophthalmological Society and The Swedish Ophthalmological Society, and also the European Association for Vision and Eye Research (EVER). Acta Ophthalmologica publishes clinical and experimental original articles, reviews, editorials, educational photo essays (Diagnosis and Therapy in Ophthalmology), case reports and case series, letters to the editor and doctoral theses.
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