Schwartz Stephen G, Wang Xue, Chavis Pamela, Kuriyan Ajay E, Abariga Samuel A
Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Jun 18;6(6):CD008428. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008428.pub3.
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) comprises a group of hereditary eye diseases characterized by progressive degeneration of retinal photoreceptors. It results in severe visual loss that may lead to blindness. Symptoms may become manifest during childhood or adulthood which include poor night vision (nyctalopia) and constriction of peripheral vision (visual field loss). Visual field loss is progressive and affects central vision later in the disease course. The worldwide prevalence of RP is approximately 1 in 4000, with 100,000 individuals affected in the USA. At this time, there is no proven therapy for RP.
The objective of this review was to synthesize the best available evidence regarding the effectiveness and safety of vitamin A and fish oils (docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)) in preventing the progression of RP.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), which contains the Cochrane Eyes and Vision Trials Register (2020, Issue 2); Ovid MEDLINE; Embase.com; PubMed; Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature Database (LILACS); ClinicalTrials.gov; the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP); and OpenGrey. We did not use any date or language restrictions in the electronic searches for trials. We last searched the electronic databases on 7 February 2020.
We included randomized controlled trials that enrolled participants of any age diagnosed with any degree of severity or type of RP, and evaluated the effectiveness of vitamin A, fish oils (DHA), or both compared to placebo, vitamins (other than vitamin A), or no therapy, as a treatment for RP. We excluded cluster-randomized trials and cross-over trials.
We prespecified the following outcomes: mean change from baseline visual field, mean change from baseline electroretinogram (ERG) amplitudes, and anatomic changes as measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT), at one-year follow-up, and mean change in visual acuity, at five-year follow-up. Two review authors independently extracted data and evaluated risk of bias for all included trials. We also contacted study investigators for further information when necessary.
In addition to three trials from the previous version of this review, we included a total of four trials with 944 participants aged 4 to 55 years. Two trials included only participants with X-linked RP and the other two included participants with RP of all forms of genetic predisposition. Two trials evaluated the effect of DHA alone; one trial evaluated vitamin A alone; and one trial evaluated DHA and vitamin A versus vitamin A alone. Two trials recruited participants from the USA, and the other two recruited from the USA and Canada. All trials were at low risk of bias for most domains. We did not perform meta-analysis due to clinical heterogeneity. Four trials assessed visual field sensitivity. Investigators found no evidence of a difference in mean values between the groups. However, one trial found that the annual rate of change of visual field sensitivity over four years favored the DHA group in foveal (-0.02 ± 0.55 (standard error (SE)) dB versus -0.47 ± 0.03 dB, P = 0.039), macular (-0.42 ± 0.05 dB versus -0.85 ± 0.03 dB, P = 0.031), peripheral (-0.39 ± 0.02 versus -0.86 ± 0.02 dB, P < 0.001), and total visual field sensitivity (-0.39 ± 0.02 versus -0.86 ± 0.02 dB, P < 0.001). The certainty of the evidence was very low. The four trials evaluated visual acuity (LogMAR scale) at a follow-up of four to six years. In one trial (208 participants), investigators found no evidence of a difference between the two groups, as both groups lost 0.7 letters of the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) visual acuity per year. In another trial (41 participants), DHA showed no evidence of effect on visual acuity (mean difference -0.01 logMAR units (95% confidence interval -0.14 to 0.12; one letter difference between the two groups; very low-certainty evidence). In the third trial (60 participants), annual change in mean number of letters correct was -0.8 (DHA) and 1.4 letters (placebo), with no evidence of between-group difference. In the fourth trial (572 participants), which evaluated (vitamin A + vitamin E trace) compared with (vitamin A trace + vitamin E trace), decline in ETDRS visual acuity was 1.1 versus 0.9 letters per year, respectively. All four trials reported electroretinography (ERG). Investigators of two trials found no evidence of a difference between the DHA and placebo group in yearly rates of change in 31 Hz cone ERG amplitude (mean ± SE) (-0.028 ± 0.001 log μV versus -0.022 ± 0.002 log μV; P = 0.30); rod ERG amplitude (mean ± SE) (-0.010 ± 0.001 log μV versus -0.023 ± 0.001 log μV; P = 0.27); and maximal ERG amplitude (mean ± SE) (-0.042 ± 0.001 log μV versus -0.036 ± 0.001 log μV; P = 0.65). In another trial, a slight difference (6.1% versus 7.1%) in decline of ERG per year favored vitamin A (P = 0.01). The certainty of the evidence was very low. One trial (51 participants) that assessed optical coherence tomography found no evidence of a difference in ellipsoid zone constriction (P = 0.87) over two years, with very low-certainty evidence. The other three trials did not report this outcome. Only one trial reported adverse events, which found that 27/60 participants experienced 42 treatment-related emergent adverse events (22 in DHA group, 20 in placebo group). The certainty of evidence was very low. The rest of the trials reported no adverse events, and no study reported any evidence of benefit of vitamin supplementation on the progression of visual acuity loss.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Based on the results of four studies, it is uncertain if there is a benefit of treatment with vitamin A or DHA, or both for people with RP. Future trials should also take into account the changes observed in ERG amplitudes and other outcome measures from trials included in this review.
视网膜色素变性(RP)是一组遗传性眼病,其特征是视网膜光感受器进行性退化。它会导致严重的视力丧失,甚至可能导致失明。症状可能在儿童期或成年期出现,包括夜视力差(夜盲症)和周边视力缩小(视野缺损)。视野缺损是渐进性的,在疾病后期会影响中心视力。RP在全球的患病率约为4000分之一,在美国有10万人受影响。目前,尚无经证实的RP治疗方法。
本综述的目的是综合关于维生素A和鱼油(二十二碳六烯酸(DHA))预防RP进展的有效性和安全性的最佳现有证据。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL),其中包含Cochrane眼科和视力试验注册库(2020年第2期);Ovid MEDLINE;Embase.com;PubMed;拉丁美洲和加勒比健康科学文献数据库(LILACS);ClinicalTrials.gov;世界卫生组织(WHO)国际临床试验注册平台(ICTRP);以及OpenGrey。我们在电子检索试验时未使用任何日期或语言限制。我们最后一次检索电子数据库是在2020年2月7日。
我们纳入了随机对照试验,试验对象为任何年龄、被诊断为任何严重程度或类型的RP患者,并评估了维生素A、鱼油(DHA)或两者与安慰剂、维生素(维生素A除外)或不治疗相比作为RP治疗的有效性。我们排除了整群随机试验和交叉试验。
我们预先设定了以下结局指标:一年随访时,从基线视野的平均变化、从基线视网膜电图(ERG)振幅的平均变化,以及通过光学相干断层扫描(OCT)测量的解剖学变化;五年随访时,视力的平均变化。两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估所有纳入试验的偏倚风险。必要时,我们还联系了研究调查人员以获取更多信息。
除了本综述上一版本中的三项试验外,我们总共纳入了四项试验,共944名年龄在4至55岁之间的参与者。两项试验仅纳入了X连锁RP患者,另外两项试验纳入了所有遗传易感性形式的RP患者。两项试验评估了单独使用DHA的效果;一项试验评估了单独使用维生素A的效果;一项试验评估了DHA和维生素A与单独使用维生素A的对比。两项试验在美国招募参与者,另外两项试验在美国和加拿大招募参与者。所有试验在大多数领域的偏倚风险都很低。由于临床异质性,我们未进行荟萃分析。四项试验评估了视野敏感度。研究人员未发现两组之间平均值有差异的证据。然而,一项试验发现,在四年中,视野敏感度的年变化率在中央凹(-0.02±0.55(标准误(SE))dB对-0.47±0.03 dB,P = 0.039)、黄斑(-0.42±0.05 dB对-0.85±0.03 dB,P = 0.031)、周边(-0.39±0.02对-0.86±0.02 dB,P < 0.001)和总视野敏感度(-0.39±0.02对-0.86±0.02 dB,P < 0.001)方面有利于DHA组。证据的确定性非常低。四项试验在四至六年的随访中评估了视力(LogMAR量表)。在一项试验(208名参与者)中,研究人员未发现两组之间有差异的证据,因为两组每年都损失了早期治疗糖尿病性视网膜病变研究(ETDRS)视力的0.7个字母。在另一项试验(41名参与者)中,DHA对视力没有影响的证据(平均差异-0.01 LogMAR单位(95%置信区间-0.14至0.12;两组之间相差一个字母;证据确定性非常低)。在第三项试验(60名参与者)中,正确字母数的平均年变化为-0.8(DHA)和1.4个字母(安慰剂),没有组间差异的证据。在第四项试验(572名参与者)中,评估了(维生素A+微量维生素E)与(微量维生素A+微量维生素E)相比,ETDRS视力每年下降分别为1.1和0.9个字母。所有四项试验都报告了视网膜电图(ERG)。两项试验的研究人员未发现DHA组和安慰剂组在31 Hz视锥细胞ERG振幅(平均值±标准误)的年变化率上有差异(-0.028±0.001 log μV对-0.022±0.002 log μV;P = 0.30);视杆细胞ERG振幅(平均值±标准误)(-0.010±0.001 log μV对-0.023±0.001 log μV;P = 0.27);以及最大ERG振幅(平均值±标准误)(-0.042±0.001 log μV对-0.036±0.001 log μV;P = 0.65)。在另一项试验中,每年ERG下降的轻微差异(6.1%对7.1%)有利于维生素A(P = 0.01)。证据的确定性非常低。一项评估光学相干断层扫描的试验(51名参与者)在两年内未发现椭圆体带收缩有差异的证据(P = 0.87),证据确定性非常低。其他三项试验未报告此结局。只有一项试验报告了不良事件,该试验发现60名参与者中有27名经历了42次与治疗相关的紧急不良事件(DHA组22例,安慰剂组20例)。证据的确定性非常低。其余试验未报告不良事件,也没有研究报告维生素补充剂对视力丧失进展有任何益处的证据。
基于四项研究的结果,对于RP患者,使用维生素A或DHA或两者治疗是否有益尚不确定。未来的试验还应考虑本综述中试验所观察到的ERG振幅变化和其他结局指标。